English edit

Verb edit

shralp (third-person singular simple present shralps, present participle shralping, simple past and past participle shralped)

  1. To shred, rip, or tear.
    • 1989, Vermont Magazine[1], volumes 1-2, North Country Pub., page 25:
      Shralp on down to the show room and scope it out.
    • 1990, Body Boarding[2], volume 6, number 4, Western Empire Publications:
      You see that turn and it looks like "shralp." You'd never imagine Pat Caldwell can do the things he does as big and tall as he is. He's so loose, he can turn on a dime and he's just... just Pat.
    • 1996, Skiing[3], Mar-Apr edition, volume 48, number 7, →ISSN, page 51:
      In an attempt to find and "shralp the gnarl," or "extreminate," we wandered farther and farther from the lifts. We couldn't believe how good the snow was after an uncommon two weeks of rain.
    • 1999, Surfer[4], volume 40, numbers 7-12, Surfer Publications:
      Who is your hero? Dick Schmidt. Mad props to all the carps who still shralp on shortboards.
    • 2012 August 6, Richard Harrington, Mark Weiser, Professional Web Video: Plan, Produce, Distribute, Promote and Monetize Quality Video[5], Taylor & Francis, →ISBN, page 243:
      Web video producers who partner can get a lot further than those who attempt to do everything on their own. Publish a Blog You should use a blog platform to. Working with Public relations Firms forum snowboards shralp!
    • 2021 November 5, Victor Quinaz, “Sugarbush” (13:37 from the start), in Big Mouth[6], season 5, episode 9, spoken by Andrew (John Mulaney):
      You're right, Andrew Glouberman would kill himself. But Andrew Birch is gonna shralp this pow-pow.