slidder

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English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology 1

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From Middle English slider, from Old English slidor, from Proto-West Germanic *slidr, from Proto-Germanic *slidraz, from Proto-Indo-European *slidʰ-ró-s, from *sleydʰ- (to slip, glide). Related to Old English slīdan (to slide). More at slide.

Adjective

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slidder (comparative more slidder, superlative most slidder)

  1. (obsolete) Slippery.
Derived terms
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Etymology 2

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From Middle English slyderen, slidren, from Old English sliderian (to slip), from Proto-West Germanic *slidrōn (to slide), from Proto-Indo-European *sleydʰ- (to slip). Cognate with Middle Dutch slideren (to drag, train), German schlittern (to slip, slide).

Verb

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slidder (third-person singular simple present slidders, present participle sliddering, simple past and past participle sliddered)

  1. (dialectal or archaic) To slip or slide, especially clumsily, or in a gingerly, timorous way.
    He sliddered down as best as he could.
    • 1910, Rudyard Kipling, Simple Simon:
      The smoke-pat sliddered over to the French shore, so I knowed Frankie was edgin' the Spanishers toward they Dutch sands where he was master.

Anagrams

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Middle English

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Adjective

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slidder

  1. Alternative form of slider

Scots

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Verb

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slidder

  1. To slither.

Swedish

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Etymology

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From sladder, likely via sliddersladder. First attested in 1855.

Noun

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slidder n

  1. (colloquial) nonsense

Declension

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Further reading

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