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WordNet
slip on

v. put on with ease or speed; "slip into something more comfortable after work"; "slip on one's shoes" [ant: slip off]

Usage examples of "slip on".

Texas, Gwillam Forte, Captain, had sailed from its slip on its fatal voyage.

Verger forced himself to push as well with his sound leg, hoping that they weren't going around in circles as the marsh grew more liquid under his back, and his heel started to slip on the slick mud-coated surface of the crushed reeds.

He had ridden down to Times Square and had given her the slip on the chance that she might have recognized him.

Regaining her feet, Kayla staggered down the streambed, sloshing through the cold water and trying not to slip on the wet stones.

The horse could slip on the unsteady path, both mount and Gringg ending up in deep, viscous mud.

I stopped stowing money long enough to slip on the gas-tight goggles and settle them into place.

The dan buoy, hanging from a slip on the stern, lurched drunkenly into the water, swayed wildly, then under the steadying pull of the weight and the tide settled down to its appointed job of marking a spot.

A slip on the edge of the canyon would send a man straight into space.

He was still wearing his holster, so all he had to do was knot his tie and slip on his jacket.

There was blood on the boards all around me, and I recall cautioning myself not to slip on it.