slot
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /slɒt/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -ɒt
Etymology 1
Middle Low German slot or Middle Dutch slot, ultimately from Proto-Germanic *slutą. Cognate with German Schloss (“door-bolt”), Dutch slot.
The verb is probably from Middle Dutch sluten (“to close, to lock”) (Modern Dutch sluiten (“to close”)).
Noun
slot (plural slots)
- A broad, flat, wooden bar, a slat, especially as used to secure a door, window, etc.
- A metal bolt or wooden bar, especially as a crosspiece.
- (Scotland, Northern England) An implement for baring, bolting, locking or securing a door, box, gate, lid, window or the like.
- (electrical) A channel opening in the stator or rotor of a rotating machine for ventilation and insertion of windings.
- (slang, surfing) The barrel or tube of a wave.
Translations
Verb
slot (third-person singular simple present slots, present participle slotting, simple past and past participle slotted)
- (obsolete, Scotland, Northern England) To bar, bolt or lock a door or window.
- (obsolete, transitive, Britain, dialectal) To shut with violence; to slam.
- to slot a door
Etymology 2
From Old French esclot, of unknown origin.
Noun
slot (plural slots)
- A narrow depression, perforation, or aperture; especially, one for the reception of a piece fitting or sliding in it.
- A gap in a schedule or sequence.
- (aviation) The allocated time for an aircraft's departure or arrival at an airport's runway.
- (aviation) In a flying display, the fourth position; after the leader and two wingmen.
- (computing) A space in memory or on disk etc. in which a particular type of object can be stored.
- The game offers four save slots.
- (informal) A slot machine designed for gambling.
- (slang) The vagina.
- 2006, Shelby Reed, Madison Hayes, Love a Younger Man (page 165)
- She'd like him jammed into her slot, like him to crank into her and she didn't think ignition would be far off if he did.
- 2006, Rod Waleman, The Stepdaughters (page 20)
- Valerie sighed with pleasure as her husband skillfully found her slot and inserted the head of his straining prick inside, then bucked its thick-stemmed length all the way up her sex-channel.
- 2006, Shelby Reed, Madison Hayes, Love a Younger Man (page 165)
Derived terms
- slotwise
Translations
|
|
|
Verb
slot (third-person singular simple present slots, present participle slotting, simple past and past participle slotted)
- To put something (such as a coin) into a slot (narrow aperture)
- To assign something or someone into a slot (gap in a schedule or sequence)
- To put something where it belongs.
- (slang, Rhodesia, in the context of the Rhodesian Bush War) To kill.
- 1978, The Bridge, vol. 3, p. 31:
- One young soldier told me he couldn't bear to shoot the wild game in Rhodesia, but he had no trouble "slotting" floppies.
- 1978, The Bridge, vol. 3, p. 31:
Derived terms
Etymology 3
From Old French esclot, from Old Norse slóð (“track”). Compare sleuth.
Noun
slot (plural slots)
- The track of an animal, especially a deer.
- 1819: “One is from Hexamshire; he is wont to trace the Tynedale and Teviotdale thieves, as a bloodhound follows the slot of a hurt deer.” — Walter Scott, Ivanhoe
Derived terms
Translations
See also
Anagrams
Danish
Etymology
From Middle Dutch slot (“a bolt, lock, castle”), from Proto-Germanic *slut- (“to close”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [ˈslʌd̥]
Noun
slot n (singular definite slottet, plural indefinite slotte)
Inflection
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch slot, from Old Dutch *slot, from Proto-Germanic *slutą.
Pronunciation
audio (file) - IPA(key): /slɔt/
- Rhymes: -ɔt
Noun
slot n (plural sloten, diminutive slotje n)
- lock (something used for fastening)
- castle
- end, conclusion
Synonyms
Derived terms
- (castle): slotgracht, slottoren
- (end): tenslotte, ten slotte, slotpleidooi, slotrede