English edit

Etymology edit

a- +‎ slide

Adjective edit

aslide (comparative more aslide, superlative most aslide)

  1. Sliding.
    • 1865, Mary Mapes Dodge, chapter 19, in Hans Brinker[1], New York: James O’Kane, published 1867, page 140:
      It was a rare thing for these boats to be upon the canal and their appearance generally caused no little excitement among skaters, especially the timid; but to-day every ice-boat in the country seemed afloat or rather aslide, and the canal had its full share.
    • 1912, Wilfrid Wilson Gibson, “The Slag”, in Fires, Book III: The Hare, and Other Tales[2], London: Elkin Mathews, page 13:
      A shower of cinders through the air . . .
      A grind of blocks of slag aslide . . .
    • 1922, Maurice Hewlett, “The Morris”, in Extemporary Essays[3], Oxford University Press, page 158:
      Another [dance], in which one man seemed to fly, one to pursue, in which the hunted seemed to invite the hunter, with a swift skirting movement, his feet aslide, and one elbow crooked—that was the eternal invitation to pursuit and capture, the love-chase of high antiquity.
    • 1959, Poul Anderson, “The Sky People”, in Maurai and Kith[4], TOR, published 1982, page 53:
      Another pirate had landed there and a third was just arriving, two more aslide behind him.
  2. Covered (with something sliding).
    • 2008, Toni Morrison, A Mercy[5], New York: Knopf, page 70:
      We pour buckets of hot water into the washtub and gather wintergreen to sprinkle in. [] Mistress stands up and rushes to him. Her naked skin is aslide with wintergreen.

Anagrams edit