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Adsdd Posted 6 years ago
Grammar

Slip of a place

On an ordinary day, you might miss this slip of a shop wedged between a veterinary clinic and a grocery store in Paris' popular Bastille.


I often see slip of a mountain, slip of a shop, slip of a country. What does slip mean in this context?

  

Top answer

This is a different word from the one from the verb to do with sliding. It is the "slip" you see in "deposit slip", a narrow piece of paper. It is properly used only of persons when used figuratively as it is in your examples, and any attempt to use it to refer to an inanimate object in the form "slip of a X" had better be a self-conscious personification.

  • This is a different word from the one from the verb to do with sliding.
  • It is the "slip" you see in "deposit slip", a narrow piece of paper.
  • It is properly used only of persons when used figuratively as it is in your examples, and any attempt to use it to refer to an inanimate object in the form "slip of a X" had better be a self-conscious personification.
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2 Answers
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This is a different word from the one from the verb to do with sliding. It is the "slip" you see in "deposit slip", a narrow piece of paper. It is properly used only of persons when used figuratively as it is in your examples, and any attempt to use it to refer to an inanimate object in the form "slip of a X" had better be a self-conscious personification.

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DDefinition of slip (Entry 3 of 5)

3 : a young and slender person, a slip of a girlhttps://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/slip _____________________________________________________________________________________________I've only seen or heard 'slip of a . . .

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