See also: Slappy

English edit

Etymology edit

slap +‎ -y

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

slappy (comparative slappier, superlative slappiest)

  1. Resembling a slap, especially of sound.
    • 1855, Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass:
      Where the laughing-gull scoots by the slappy shore and laughs her near-human laugh
    • 1963, Delphin Rose Adsett, A magpie sings:
      Katy thought about the damp yellow bodies which often landed, with a slappy sound in a burst of moisture and steam rose off them because they were parted from the warmth of their mothers.
    • 1998, Dan Gelo, Fiddle Tunes & Irish Music for Mandolin, page 11:
      Thin picks flex too much and make your wrist work overtime, plus they tend to produce a slappy tone. Those heavy picks popular with today's bluegrass mandolinists are really too stiff for playing the rapid triplets in some Irish tunes.
    • 2009, Elisabeth Hyde, In the Heart of the Canyon, page 55:
      Jill had Mark apply sunscreen to her back.
      "Bet these river guides get a lot of skin cancer", he said. He had a slappy, unpleasant way of doing it, and she struggled to keep her balance.

Noun edit

slappy (plural slappies)

  1. (skateboarding) A grind on a curb without doing an ollie.