He always slurps his soup. the child slurped the milk from his bowl when he had eaten all the cereal
Recent Examples on the WebThere’s a sweep net to brush them out of shrubs, a beating stick to knock them out of trees, and a suction sampler to slurp them from grass and moss. Victoria Turk, Wired, 19 July 2022 Go ahead and pick up the bowl to slurp that last sip of the intoxicating elixir. Leslie Kelly, Forbes, 17 May 2022 From tofu to mushy vegetables, Doña will slurp it all down with her straw. Lauren Morgan, EW.com, 8 Aug. 2022 The primary federal law governing the type and amount of student data that companies can slurp up is the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act.Wired, 4 Aug. 2022 Then comes the captain’s dinner, which plays like a Monty Python sketch, as the guests try to slurp oysters while a storm rocks the boat. Peter Debruge, Variety, 21 May 2022 The true customer of Big Slushie isn’t you, the slurper, but the C-stores who would tempt you to slurp. Ian Bogost, The Atlantic, 30 Apr. 2022 These fans slurp air from beneath the car and spit it out of central rear exhaust vents, with McMurtry claiming the fans can provide about 4400 pounds of downforce at a standstill. Caleb Miller, Car and Driver, 27 June 2022 Kendall, who pretends to slurp up ironic subversion, insists on appearing as a guest on the show, but this bluff naturally ends in his own humiliation. Robyn Bahr, The Hollywood Reporter, 24 June 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Dutch slurpen; akin to Middle Low German slorpen to slurp