¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Slushes
1. slush [v] - See also: slush
Lexicographical Neighbors of Slushes
Literary usage of Slushes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Fraser's Magazine by Thomas Carlyle (1843)
"... gave life and simultaneous motion to a score of beef-and-mutton-oppressed
spits, the fifty and one nondescripts, slushes of slushes of slushes, ..."
2. Journal of the American Chemical Society by American Chemical Society (1879)
"Chlorobenzene slushes (—45°) were then placed around both traps 1 and 2 and the
circulation pump was started. The lamps were turned on initiating the ..."
3. Pneumonia: Its Supposed Connection, Pathological and Etiological, with by René La Roche (1854)
"Ponds and slushes are abundant, wherever the black slate constitutes the surface-rock.
The first houses erected at the fall were built in the midst of ponds ..."
4. Punch by Mark Lemon, Henry Mayhew, Tom Taylor, Shirley Brooks, Francis Cowley Burnand, Owen Seaman (1870)
"The tight sleeves bave ' puffs on the shoulders and slushes of white satin veiled
with blank lace." IB it possible yea are still sad 'and lick and shivering ..."
5. The Bookman (1905)
"His shoes had trodden the snows and slushes and dust of many months. The soles
were tied on his feet with strings, his bare skin showed at the sides. ..."
6. History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, called Frederick the Great: in ten vol by Thomas Carlyle (1864)
"... Prince Karl has himself written to Court that, having now pushed his Enemy
fairly over the Elbe, and Winter being come with its sleets and slushes, ..."
7. History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1864)
"Truth is, Prince Karl has himself written to Court that, having now pushed his
Enemy fairly over the Elbe, and Winter being come with its sleets and slushes ..."
8. History of Friedrich II of Prussia, Called Frederick the Great by Thomas Carlyle (1864)
"Truth is, Prince Karl has himself written to Court that, having now pushed his
Enemy fairly over the Elbe, and Winter being come with to sleets and slushes, ..."