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slobber
[slob-er]
verb (used without object)
to let saliva or liquid run from the mouth; slaver; drivel.
Synonyms: , ,to indulge in mawkish sentimentality.
My family slobbered all over me when I finally got home.
verb (used with object)
to wet or make foul by slobbering.
The baby has slobbered his bib.
to let (saliva or liquid) run from the mouth.
The baby slobbered milk on his bib.
to utter with slobbering.
He sobbed and slobbered the bad news.
noun
saliva or liquid dribbling from the mouth; slaver.
mawkishly sentimental speech or actions.
slobber
/ ˈɒə /
verb
to dribble (saliva, food, etc) from the mouth
(intr) to speak or write mawkishly
(tr) to smear with matter dribbling from the mouth
noun
liquid or saliva spilt from the mouth
maudlin language or behaviour
Other 51Թ Forms
- slobberer noun
- ˈDz adjective
- ˈDz noun
51Թ History and Origins
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of slobber1
Example Sentences
This still wasn’t enough slobber for his audience, however.
That is definitely not pleasing to Trump, who prefers it when Republicans are loudly slobbering on his boots and swearing eternal devotion.
I wipe her warm slobber from my cheeks.
He was not inside the mouth of a slobbering beast.
Only two dogs lived in my neighborhood: Mitzy, who always rode shotgun in Mrs. Hathaway’s purse, and a Saint Bernard who was sweet but grossed me out with his constant globs of slobber.
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