Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb Simple past tense and past participle of slapdash.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • I just kind of slapdashed my entry together, since I'm not that well versed in photo editing.

    CROM! Header Contest Wrap Up! Cromsblood 2010

  • The sudden blast of loud explosive laughter slapdashed the dark walls of the hallway, a wicked laughter, alive and rudely beautiful, and the racket splashed Ermila as she stood under the threshold of the door.

    Their Dogs Came With Them Helena María Viramontes 2007

  • Instead, all the dams and blockages and moats and stop-water gaps that were slapdashed together by the desperate engineers were dragged down, overwhelmed, and obliterated by the sheer force of the Colorado.

    I Feel Earthquakes More Often Than They Happen Amy Wilentz 2006

  • Instead, all the dams and blockages and moats and stop-water gaps that were slapdashed together by the desperate engineers were dragged down, overwhelmed, and obliterated by the sheer force of the Colorado.

    I Feel Earthquakes More Often Than They Happen Amy Wilentz 2006

  • The rest consisted of impressions—the moon, the stars, the wind—a piece of instant color, slapdashed from the scene, giving the reader a taste of the neighborhood and a quick knee-jerk point of view.

    Sins of Two Fathers Denis Hamill 2003

  • The rest consisted of impressions—the moon, the stars, the wind—a piece of instant color, slapdashed from the scene, giving the reader a taste of the neighborhood and a quick knee-jerk point of view.

    Sins of Two Fathers Denis Hamill 2003

  • The rest consisted of impressions—the moon, the stars, the wind—a piece of instant color, slapdashed from the scene, giving the reader a taste of the neighborhood and a quick knee-jerk point of view.

    Sins of Two Fathers Denis Hamill 2003

  • The rest consisted of impressions—the moon, the stars, the wind—a piece of instant color, slapdashed from the scene, giving the reader a taste of the neighborhood and a quick knee-jerk point of view.

    Sins of Two Fathers Denis Hamill 2003

  • I can usually turn the other cheek when I see gossip and slander slapdashed across the face of

    The Pitch | Complete Issue 2009

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