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Crossword clues for sloppy

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
sloppy
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a sloppy kiss (=a kiss with rather wet lips)
▪ Her little boy gave her a sloppy kiss on the cheek.
sloppy joe
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a fashionable/stylish/sloppy etc dresser
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ a sloppy investigation
▪ a sloppy old sweater
▪ As a student, he was brilliant but sloppy.
▪ Ben has very sloppy handwriting.
▪ He gave me a sloppy kiss on the cheek.
▪ How can you expect an 'A' in this class when you turn in an essay as sloppy as this?
▪ The carpenter I hired did such a sloppy job that I finally had to fix the roof myself.
▪ The company's failure was blamed on sloppy management.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As is clear from the above, Giddens's querying of Freud is more than a pedantic concentration on sloppy terminology.
▪ But he can be sloppy about detail.
▪ He talked about sloppy packaging that could have contaminated evidence.
▪ It was sloppy practice, I told the crew.
▪ Remember that big sloppy jumper you knitted me when I was in the sixth form - that maroon one?
▪ The first two Blackburn goals were very sloppy and I think Newsome was to blame.
▪ The text is disfigured by irritating errors and sloppy proofreading.
▪ This application was very poorly written-and is typical of the sloppy applications submitted by your competitors.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Sloppy

Sloppy \Slop"py\, a. [Compar. Sloppier; superl. Sloppiest.] Wet, so as to spatter easily; wet, as with something slopped over; muddy; plashy; as, a sloppy place, walk, road.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
sloppy

1727, "muddy," from slop (n.1) + -y (2). Meaning "loose, ill-fitting, slovenly" is first recorded 1825, influenced by slop (n.2). Related: Sloppily; sloppiness. Sloppy Joe was originally "loose-fitting sweater worn by girls" (1942); as a name for a kind of spiced hamburger, it is attested from 1961.

Wiktionary
sloppy

a. 1 Very wet; covered in or composed of slop. 2 messy; not neat, elegant, or careful. 3 imprecise or loose.

WordNet
sloppy
  1. adj. lacking neatness or order; "a sloppy room"; "sloppy habits"

  2. marked by great carelessness; "a most haphazard system of record keeping"; "slapdash work"; "slipshod spelling"; "sloppy workmanship" [syn: haphazard, slapdash, slipshod]

  3. [also: sloppiest, sloppier]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "sloppy".

His ungrammatical French was the fluidly sloppy get-along speech of an Anglophone who has made his home among French-speakers for a few months, not the half-African patois of the slave quarters.

If soft, sloppy, nervous Harry Broll could almost do me in with a pop gun, my next meeting with professional talent could be mortal.

The guy was in the sloppy baggy pants a lot of kids were favoring at the moment, a huge T-shirt, the inevitable baseball cap on backward: a tall kid, maybe seventeen, eighteen years old, hatchet-faced, with a thin little excuse for a mustache just growing, his hair blond, longish, shoved back under the hat.

Cam asked, aghast, as her sister opened the spice jar and sprinkled a sloppy circle of marjoram flakes onto the clean floor.

Claudius Mellit, whose patients usually saw him in striped trousers and black jacket, was sensibly attired for winter golf in waterproof trousers and a comfortably sloppy Norwegian sweater.

I had the sloppiest of the three landings, bouncing high, dropping almost straight down, twisting my ankle on the small stones, and going to my knees while the parawing struck hard on a boulder above me, bending metal and rending fabric.

So that herd of twelve horses might spend a whole day thundering up and down the increasingly sloppy and treacherous field, with the players bellowing and cursing and the spectators roaring encouragement, and the sticks waving and crashing and often splintering, and the churned-up terrain plastering the players and horses and watchers and musicians, and the riders falling from their saddles and trying to scurry to safety and being cheerfully ridden down by their fellows, and, toward the end of the day, when the field was a mere swamp of mud and slime, the horses also slipping and slewing and falling down.

It does that too, in fact, and Plex was too sloppy with the biocodes to dig any deeper than he did.

Kraft is performing sloppy seconds on an emergency repair cobbled together by Plummer on an eleven-year-old male who was riding semifigurative shotgun in a car that a couple club brothers had taken out on community loan.

As he came across in her exuberant description, he was a happy-go-lucky sharpie with a heart full of larceny but without any vestige of a mean streak, a chipper quick-witted con man with a deck of cards in one hand and a stack of uranium stock in the other, a heavy drinker but not a sloppy one, a big spender and a good-time Charlie, a man whose sense of responsibility and need for security were about as well developed as that of the lilies of the field.

Her signing is rather sloppy and sometimes I wonder if it is signing at all.

No sense in spooking themthe long wilderness vacation had made her a little sloppy.

For the moment, however, we left the derelict creature, and with joyful hearts, for we unpractised visitors were weary and aching, found ourselves once more in front of the engraved portal of the roof, and finally standing safe and sound, divested of our vitrine bells, on the sloppy floor of the entrance chamber.

Betty volunteered to come to her old kitchen and cook sloppy joes and bake half-dozen apple pies, and the owner of a carryout store, the captain of the precinct where David lived, sold those chips and beverages at cost.

Though these came in all sizes, they were all essentially of the same design: a fat cylinder of some transparent cladding, ribbed with metal, provided on both sides with caterpillar treads bearing cleats so large that they could also serve as paddles where the going underfoot became especially sloppy.