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sling off

verb

  1. informal.
    to laugh or jeer (at)
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Example Sentences

“It was one of those situations where I knew I had to get out and I saw they were moving on the turn and I just started pumping my arms on the turn. I knew I could sling off and grab the momentum,” Lyles explained.

“Well, they learned how to make machines that went right over the air as a sledge goes over snow. And after a while they learned how to make them go farther and faster, till they went like the stone out of a sling off the earth and over the clouds and out of the air, clear to another world, going around another sun. And when they got to that world, what did they find there but men...”

“The guys know what he’s been through. That’s part of it. There are a lot of things about him that make you respect him, not just like him, but respect him. If he could play now, he would. He’d take that sling off and play. “And that’s part of why we feel he’ll come back and he’ll find every way to be as good as he’s ever been.

But the Tap doesn’t charge in its charging cradle while it’s wearing a Sling, so you’ll have to take the Sling off to do this — or skip the cradle and plug the Tap directly into its USB charging cable.

“That pushes black families to sling off assets, like I.R.A.’s or stocks, that you might have had another goal in mind for.”

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