The Collaborative International Dictionary
Slip-on \Slip"-on`\, n. A kind of overcoat worn upon the shoulders in the manner of a cloak. [Scot.]
Wiktionary
a. Describing a garment that can be pulled on without adjusting fasteners such as buttons or zippers. n. a garment that can be pulled on without adjusting fasteners such as buttons or zippers. A pull-on.
WordNet
n. an article of clothing (garment or shoe) that is easily slipped on or off
Usage examples of "slip-on".
Gray hair sprang in thinning coils from her scalp, and she wore a flowered housedress with black plastic slip-ons.
I said, understanding, and bent down obligingly to pretend to tie bows on my laceless slip-ons.
On his thin body a lapel-less suit by Yamamoto, collarless shirt by Paul Smith, slip-on shoes by Patrick Cox.
A white sock here, a pair of red braces there, a grey slip-on shoe, a swastika, are as often as not all one needs to tell you there's no point writing down phone numbers and forking out for expensive lunches because it's never going to be a runner.
They were each given a pair of plastic slip-on shoes and led through a series of corridors to a moving walkway.
Like using gel or washing your face or wearing slip-ons, having your hair cut was always considered a bit effeminate at Langley Street Comprehensive.
Jaime said, swinging her legs out of the futon-like bed and groping beneath the bed frame for the canvas slip-ons she often wore around the hold.
He looked down and willed a pair of black leather slip-ons, and straightened a hint of white handkerchief in his breast pocket.