[
UK
/slˈɪpi/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
causing or tending to cause things to slip or slide
a slippery bar of soap
slippery sidewalks
the streets are still slippy from the rain
How To Use slippy In A Sentence
- The freezing conditions on Saturday were tough for the two teams as heavy rain fell for spells making the surface very wet and slippy.
- Despite the driving rain and the slippy under-foot conditions, both teams severed up some fine passages of play.
- the streets are still slippy from the rain
- The roads were unbelievable with the weather making them so slippy and James had a few choice words.
- Sharpe took the lead on the climb and took it easy on the descent where the slates through the quarry were described as being ‘really slippy.’
- As I have said in recent weeks, this is an accident waiting to happen and the recent rain has made the ground slippy and dangerous for even the nimblest of people.
- Waiter, get this gentleman a glass of port, and look slippy.
- The situation is not helped by the fact that the mist is making the court damp and slippy.
- The situation is not helped by the fact that the mist is making the court damp and slippy.
- But they are so unbalanced they both collapse headlong into a shiny, slippy pile of glossy property freesheets and pizza chain flyers. THE CHEEK PERFORATION DANCE