a fast-moving stretch of water over a relatively smooth bed. See 1955 quote at riffle (def. 1c).
See also: riffle ((n.)) (def. 1c)
2a † n.
the mass of earth, rocks, etc. deposited by a landslide.
- 1866  (1962)  On prospeckin' I still was bent ;/Had shares in a' the kintra side,/In shafts gaun' doon thro' slum and slide. . . .
- 1908  The men had to cope with the swift current, bordered by a series of steep gumbo slides, where the tracking was hazardous. . . .
- 1957  . . . at the foot of the slide lay ten dead wild sheep, which appeared either to have been tumbled by the avalanche or to have been hit by an aircraft.
2b † n.
the part of a mountain side over which an avalanche or landslide has passed, recognizable as an area bearing a growth of grass and shrubs rather than trees.
See also: slide course
- 1916  . . . the growth on these slides varies . . . according to the exposure; and while one slide may be quite green, another may have snow on it.
3 n.
an artificial runway built on a hill for the use of tobogganists.
See also: tobogganist toboggan slide
- 1870  Our illustration shows . . . a fair sprinkling of pleasure-seekers trying to enjoy the national toboggan adown its steep slides.
- 1898  The perfection of tobogganing is found on the artificial slides which are raised to a dizzy height, with a wide, deep trough, coated with snow and ice, pitching toward the ground at a fearful angle.
- 1927  The slides are specially constructed of ice sides. . . .
4 n. — Nfld
See 1933 quote at catamaran (def. 2b).
See also: catamaran ((n.)) (def. 2b)
- 1665  (1885)  [We overloaded our slide on that rotten ice. . . .]
- 1906  Said he, "We're all right now, sir. Here's an old slide-path."
- 1937  To swamp a road or path is to build one with a bedding of boughs to be used in hauling slide loads of wood in winter.
- 1957  And the old dog Rex was harnessed next and hitched fast to the slide.
5 † n.
See 1948 quote.
See also: sliding (def. 1)
- c1948  The best place to make a set is where the otter amuse themselves sliding down steep banks until they have made a "slide."
- 1920  The animals [otters] may be seen sliding down and climbing up again for hours on end, evidently in a state of keen enjoyment. Trappers take advantage of this habit to capture the otters at their slides.