Synonyms for slob
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : slob |
Phonetic Transcription : slÉ’b |
Définition of slob
Origin :- 1780, "mud, muddy land," from Irish slab "mud, mire dirt," itself probably borrowed from English slab "muddy place" (c.1600), from a Scandinavian source (cf. Icelandic slabb "sludge"). The meaning "untidy person" is first recorded 1887, from earlier expressions such as slob of a man (1861).
- noun pig
- noun messy person
- He's a big man and I'm a slob; but all of that doesn't seem to count with him.
- Extract from : « Mixed Faces » by Roy Norton
- Now it is "slob" mixed with snow born on the Newfoundland coast.
- Extract from : « A Labrador Doctor » by Wilfred Thomason Grenfell
- You were the one who thought this particular average man was a slob.
- Extract from : « The Common Man » by Guy McCord (AKA Dallas McCord Reynolds)
- "You're a bossy sort of slob, Heslet Quillan," she said equably.
- Extract from : « Legacy » by James H Schmitz
- Pal Arthur is all very well, but at bossing a bit of a slob.
- Extract from : « Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 108, February 23, 1895 » by Various
- What are you talking nonsense—act like a slob, Mr. Trinkmann?
- Extract from : « The Competitive Nephew » by Montague Glass
- The packed "slob" was "running abroad," as the fisher-folk say.
- Extract from : « Grenfell: Knight-Errant of the North » by Fullerton Waldo
- The sandwich-man had been amiably told by Andrew Barrett, "Hold the pose, you slob!"
- Extract from : « H. R. » by Edwin Lefevre
- It had been an ideal costume to struggle through the slob ice.
- Extract from : « Adrift on an Ice-Pan » by Wilfred T. Grenfell
- It took an hour to break up the "slob" ice which had cemented about the ship.
- Extract from : « The North Pole » by Robert E. Peary
Most wanted synonyms
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019