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slice
[slahys]
noun
a thin, flat piece cut from something.
a slice of bread.
a part, portion, or share.
a slice of land.
any of various implements with a thin, broad blade or part, as for turning food in a frying pan, serving fish at the table, or taking up printing ink; spatula.
Sports.
the path described by a ball, as in baseball or golf, that curves in a direction corresponding to the side from which it was struck.
a ball describing such a path.
Tennis., a stroke executed by hitting down on the ball with an underhand motion and thus creating backspin.
verb (used with object)
to cut into slices; divide into parts.
to cut through or cleave with or as if with a knife.
The ship sliced the sea.
to cut off or remove as a slice or slices (sometimes followed by off, away, from, etc.).
to remove by means of a slice, slice bar, or similar implement.
Sports., to hit (a ball) so as to result in a slice.
verb (used without object)
to slice something.
to admit of being sliced.
Sports.
(of a player) to slice the ball.
(of a ball) to describe a slice in flight.
slice
/ slaɪs /
noun
a thin flat piece cut from something having bulk
a slice of pork
a share or portion
a slice of the company's revenue
any of various utensils having a broad flat blade and resembling a spatula
the flight of a ball that travels obliquely because it has been struck off centre
the action of hitting such a shot
the shot so hit
verb
to divide or cut (something) into parts or slices
to cut in a clean and effortless manner
to move or go (through something) like a knife
the ship sliced through the water
to cut or be cut (from) a larger piece
(tr) to remove by use of a slicing implement
to hit (a ball) with a slice
(tr) rowing to put the blade of the oar into (the water) slantwise
Other Word Forms
- sliceable adjective
- slicingly adverb
- preslice verb (used with object)
- unsliced adjective
- slicer noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of slice1
Idioms and Phrases
Example Sentences
Knife skills, too, were given a linguistic beat: “Motion of the ocean” for rocking cuts, “slices, sticks, dices” to map the rhythm of the hand and blade.
It instantly strikes me as an amazing slice of history but a very difficult place to navigate if you do not necessarily feel welcome.
"House Tour is sensational, a chugging slice of 80s power-pop so instantly catchy that you're able to forgive it holding some of the album's biggest lyrical clunkers," citing some of her more suggestive lyrics.
Footage from the football-like atmosphere in Spielberg went viral and soon other tracks wanted a slice of the orange pie.
The fund will be sliced into thirds, with two-thirds, or about $33.9 million, set aside for property owners, and one-third, or about $16.7 million, for residents.
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