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Loud slap
Answer for the clue "Loud slap ", 5 letters:
smack
Alternative clues for the word smack
Word definitions for smack in dictionaries
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"to slap a flat surface with the hand," 1835, from smack (n.) in this sense; perhaps influenced by Low German smacken "to strike, throw," which is likely of imitative origin (compare Swedish smak "slap," Middle Low German smacken , Frisian smakke , Dutch ...
Usage examples of smack.
And smacked into a hard body, as the Argon deftly thwarted her attempt by shifting himself into her path.
The sight of the aviso heading flat out into the bay turned his stomach for a moment, since it smacked of impending danger.
Wind smacked him in the face and chest, clawing at him, snapping and whipping like a living thing, and for a horrible moment, Batman thought he was going to be torn in two, that the force would break his neck, that.
And then she playfully boxed his ear, at which he chased her around the biplane and gave her a hearty smack just below her own pretty ear.
And Blinky crammed his mouth with leaves until a smart smack on the nose from Mrs Koala made him remember his manners.
And Old Pete and Councillor Doveston and Bob the Bookie and Norman and Archroy looked on in horror as Neville stepped between his new bar staff and smacked each of them on the bottom.
Before the rain commenced, Bowie had heard sounds of the town, but now there was only the smacking of the wind-driven rain against the shocks of old wheat around him and its clatter on the stubbled earth.
But for all their burgeoning vileness, there was something about their spread that smacked of desperation.
Hearing these words, he came up to me, sneering, called me a coward, and gave me a smack on the face which almost stunned me.
So the smack was put about, and when she was moving slow through the haven again, Achanna sculled ashore in the little coggly punt.
He had called me Doofus and smacked me on the back of my head every day for fifteen years.
Willson and Stiles with hemoom prodoh encasement, lifting them and smacking them against the wall, like the others.
Cursing, the Eraser waved his arms but landed smack on top of its three-inch needles, shrieking like a train wreck in the making.
And smack dab in the middle of it was the wildest fae on any human continent, and by far the most dangerous.
France simply France, and the king of England simply England, smacks of feudalism, under which monarchy is an estate, property, not a public trust.