English edit

Etymology edit

slash +‎ -y

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

slashy (comparative slashier, superlative slashiest)

  1. Involving lots of cutting with blades, or swordwork.
    • 2008 March 25, Zach Welhouse, “Starring Sephiroth and Some Other Chumps”, in RPGamer[1], archived from the original on 27 December 2008:
      Fans of all things feathered and slashy have the rest of the month to obtain a PSP, if they don't yet have one.
    • 2004 March 25, “Pick up those blades and fight”, in Toronto Star[2]:
      Blade Warriors the game reviewed today is the first Onimusha game to come with a play style of its own It is a slashy fighting game with clanging swords
  2. resembling a slash (the punctuation mark)
    • 2009 June 22, Ted Dziuba, “Opera Software reinvents complete irrelevance”, in The Register[3]:
      It was written by a fellow named Hans S. Tommerholt, and I apologize to you all, but there's actually a slashy thing through the first "o" in his last name,
  3. wet, having wet ground, slushy
    • 1962 January 21, “Italy's No. 2 Team Leads In Two-Man Bobsled Meet”, in Baltimore Sun[4]:
      Italy's Rinaldo Ruetti mastered a slashy, water-logged bobsled run today and took a substantial lead in the world two-man championships
    • 1940 June 27, “East Bengal Beat Sporting Union Calcutta League Football”, in Indian Express[5]:
      The grounds were slashy, there being a heavy shower in the afternoon. Play with barefoot was difficult.
  4. making a movement akin to swiping a sword.
    • 2002 June 21, Owen Gleiberman, “The Bourne Identity”, in Entertainment Weekly[6], archived from the original on 6 June 2011:
      Matt Damon, playing an assassin without a cause, gets to show off some very deftly timed martial-arts moves, flipping his limbs around with the slashy percussive precision of ninja nunchakus.
    • 2002 March 24, Gary Lambrecht, Baltimore Sun[7]:
      "He is a very slashy player. Every time a shot goes up, I have to find him and know where he is at all times because he is a great offensive rebounder..."
  5. darting, running in a zigzag motion
    • 2007 January 1, Teddy Greenstein, “2-for-1 promotion ; Michigan-USC winner figures to be preseason No. 1 team in 2007”, in Chicago Tribune[8]:
      "Steve Smith is more of a slashy guy, very quick. He runs really good routes. Jarrett is a prototypical big receiver. He gets up there with the best of them..."
  6. of a work of art, done in the style that suggests the painter was slashing the canvas with a paintbrush
    • 2007, Julie Halpern, Get Well Soon, page 88:
      In the last hour we've managed to do ten [drawings] total (I did six in a more abstract, slashy style, and she did four, neatly and precisely). I've never really done any kind of art outside of school, except for writing.
    • 1988 May 1, Bill van Siclen, “Bailey's 'realism' is really something else His 'tablescapes' are deceptively simple”, in Providence Journal[9]:
      most contemporary art Bailey gives us images of classical order and balance In place of slashy brushwork and sludgy paint he gives us solid figures and uminous color.
  7. slushy, very romantic
  8. (fandom slang) Characteristic of or related to slash fiction.
    • 2001, Kelly Simca Boyd, "'One Index Finger On The Mouse Scroll And The Other On My Clit': Slash Writers' Views On Pornography, Censorship, Feminism and Risk", thesis submitted to Simon Fraser University, page 156:
      It was the first slashy story published after the threats to expose slash to the producers and actors in Starsky and Hutch.
    • 2013, Jacqueline Lichtenberg, “Recollections of a Collating Party”, in Anne Jamison, editor, Fic: Why Fanfiction Is Taking Over the World, page 92:
      One amazing claim to fame, though, is that very soon after this collating party at my house, Roberta published her slashy/raunchy stories in a fanzine that was called, I think, GRIP (a sendup of zines Grope and Grup) []
    • 2014, Kathryn Hill, “'Easy to Associate Angsty Lyrics with Buffy': An Introduction to a Participatory Fan Culture: Buffy the Vampire Slayer Vidders, Popular Music and the Internet”, in Mary Kirby-Diaz, editor, Buffy and Angel Conquer the Internet: Essays on Online Fandom, page 182:
      As this vidder's website modestly states: "I think of this vid as my proof of how slashy these shows are. []
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:slashy.

Anagrams edit