Associations to the word «Sloppy»
Noun
- Drunk
- Turnover
- Thurston
- Salute
- Ign
- Dare
- Handwriting
- Hemingway
- Kiss
- Housekeeper
- Sandwich
- Joe
- Hamburger
- Peep
- Roarke
- Encore
- Boo
- Angie
- Slug
- Grange
- Second
- Mess
- Deletion
- Mud
- Posture
- Wet
- Buttons
- Sauce
- Greed
- Pudding
- Megan
- Staircase
- Trainee
- Ambiguity
- Flaw
- Fat
- Grin
- Seth
- Eater
- Stunt
- Thinking
- Error
- Handling
- Gus
- Procedure
- Doll
- Turf
- Notation
- Maneuver
- Editing
- Stake
- Button
- Drone
- Clown
- Ditch
- Pt
- Excuse
- Habit
- Floyd
- Script
Adjective
Adverb
Wiktionary
SLOPPY, adjective. Very wet; covered in or composed of slop.
SLOPPY, adjective. Messy; not neat, elegant, or careful.
SLOPPY, adjective. Imprecise or loose.
SLOPPY JOE, noun. (US) A hot sandwich, typically composed of ground beef cooked in a skillet with highly seasoned tomato sauce or tomato paste and spread between two sides of a bun.
SLOPPY JOE, noun. (US) (New Jersey) A cold delicatessen three-decker rye bread sandwich made with sliced meat, Swiss cheese, coleslaw, and Russian dressing.
SLOPPY JOE, noun. A very loose-fitting light-weight jumper or jacket.
SLOPPY JOES, noun. Plural of sloppy joe
SLOPPY SECONDS, noun. (vulgar) (plurale tantum) Having sex with someone soon after the person has had sex with someone else.
Dictionary definition
SLOPPY, adjective. Lacking neatness or order; "a sloppy room"; "sloppy habits".
SLOPPY, adjective. Wet or smeared with a spilled liquid or moist material; "a sloppy floor"; "a sloppy saucer".
SLOPPY, adjective. (of soil) soft and watery; "the ground was boggy under foot"; "a marshy coastline"; "miry roads"; "wet mucky lowland"; "muddy barnyard"; "quaggy terrain"; "the sloughy edge of the pond"; "swampy bayous".
SLOPPY, adjective. Not fitting closely; hanging loosely; "baggy trousers"; "a loose-fitting blouse is comfortable in hot weather".
SLOPPY, adjective. Excessively or abnormally emotional.
SLOPPY, adjective. Marked by great carelessness; "a most haphazard system of record keeping"; "slapdash work"; "slipshod spelling"; "sloppy workmanship".
Wise words
The most valuable of all talents is that of never using two
words when one will do.