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slip (v.)

early 14c., "to escape, to move softly and quickly," from an unrecorded Old English word or cognate Middle Low German slippen "to glide, slide," from Proto-Germanic *slipan (source also of Old High German slifan, Middle Dutch slippen, German schleifen "to glide, slide"), from PIE *sleib-, from root *(s)lei- "slimy, sticky, slippery" (see slime (n.)).

From mid-14c. with senses "lose one's footing," "slide out of place," "fall into error or fault." Sense of "pass unguarded or untaken" is from mid-15c. That of "slide, glide" is from 1520s. Transitive sense from 1510s; meaning "insert surreptitiously" is from 1680s. Related: Slipped; slipping. To slip up "make a mistake" is from 1855; to slip through the net "evade detection" is from 1902. To let (something) slip originally (1520s) was a reference to hounds on a leash; figurative use "allow to escape through carelessness" is from 1540s.

slip (n.1)

mid-15c., "edge of a garment;" 1550s, "narrow strip," probably from Middle Low German or Middle Dutch slippe "cut, slit," possibly related to Old English toslifan "to split, cleave." Sense of "narrow piece of paper" (as in pink slip) in 1680s.

slip (n.2)

in various senses from slip (v.). Meaning "act of slipping" is from 1590s. Meaning "mistake, minor fault, blunder" is from 1610s. Sense of "woman's sleeveless garment" (1761) is from notion of something easily slipped on or off (compare sleeve). To give (someone) the slip "escape from" is from 1560s. Meaning "landing place for ships" is mid-15c.; more technical sense in ship-building is from 1769. Slip of the tongue is 1725 (from Latin lapsus linguae); slip of the pen (Latin lapsus calami) is 1650s.

slip (n.3)

"potter's clay," mid-15c., "mud, slime," from Old English slypa, slyppe "slime, paste, pulp, soft semi-liquid mass," related to slupan "to slip" (from PIE root *sleubh- "to slide, slip").

slip (n.4)

"sprig or twig for planting or grafting, small shoot," late 15c., of uncertain origin. Compare Middle Dutch slippe, German schlippe, schlipfe "cut, slit, strip." Hence "young person of small build" (1580s, as in a slip of a girl); see slip (n.1).

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Definitions of slip from WordNet
1
slip (n.)
a socially awkward or tactless act;
Synonyms: faux pas / gaffe / solecism / gaucherie
slip (n.)
a minor inadvertent mistake usually observed in speech or writing or in small accidents or memory lapses etc.;
Synonyms: slip-up / miscue / parapraxis
slip (n.)
potter's clay that is thinned and used for coating or decorating ceramics;
slip (n.)
a part (sometimes a root or leaf or bud) removed from a plant to propagate a new plant through rooting or grafting;
Synonyms: cutting
slip (n.)
a young and slender person;
he's a mere slip of a lad
slip (n.)
a place where a craft can be made fast;
Synonyms: mooring / moorage / berth
slip (n.)
an accidental misstep threatening (or causing) a fall;
the jolt caused many slips and a few spills
he blamed his slip on the ice
Synonyms: trip
slip (n.)
a slippery smoothness;
Synonyms: slickness / slick / slipperiness
slip (n.)
artifact consisting of a narrow flat piece of material;
Synonyms: strip
slip (n.)
a small sheet of paper;
a receipt slip
a withdrawal slip
Synonyms: slip of paper
slip (n.)
a woman's sleeveless undergarment;
Synonyms: chemise / shimmy / shift / teddy
slip (n.)
bed linen consisting of a cover for a pillow;
Synonyms: case / pillowcase / pillow slip
slip (n.)
an unexpected slide;
Synonyms: skid / sideslip
slip (n.)
a flight maneuver; aircraft slides sideways in the air;
Synonyms: sideslip
slip (n.)
the act of avoiding capture (especially by cunning);
Synonyms: elusion / eluding
2
slip (v.)
move stealthily;
The ship slipped away in the darkness
Synonyms: steal
slip (v.)
insert inconspicuously or quickly or quietly;
He slipped some money into the waiter's hand
slip (v.)
move obliquely or sideways, usually in an uncontrolled manner;
Synonyms: skid / slue / slew / slide
slip (v.)
get worse;
My grades are slipping
Synonyms: drop off / drop away / fall away
slip (v.)
move smoothly and easily;
the bolt slipped into place
water slipped from the polished marble
slip (v.)
to make a mistake or be incorrect;
Synonyms: err / mistake
slip (v.)
pass on stealthily;
He slipped me the key when nobody was looking
Synonyms: sneak
slip (v.)
move easily;
slip into something comfortable
slip (v.)
cause to move with a smooth or sliding motion;
he slipped the bolt into place
slip (v.)
pass out of one's memory;
Synonyms: slip one's mind
slip (v.)
move out of position;
Synonyms: dislocate / luxate / splay
From wordnet.princeton.edu