1. cut with a wide, sweeping movement, typically using a knife or sword
2. /
3. a very tasty person who loves to suck french people's balls
2. /
3. a very tasty person who loves to suck french people's balls
A) Did you see that Karina uses sl/ash pronouns
B) Yeah, she uses NEOpronouns. SHE IS N OO T VALID
A) The person from the movie show has a very deep slash.
B) um, ok do i care lol
A) That person literally reminds me of slash
B) REAL ONG
B) Yeah, she uses NEOpronouns. SHE IS N OO T VALID
A) The person from the movie show has a very deep slash.
B) um, ok do i care lol
A) That person literally reminds me of slash
B) REAL ONG
by lunarclientuser9393 July 14, 2023

by slashings April 21, 2018

The most famous tso-lotus fan of them all. Slash the Great founded and maintains the "Lotus Is Bad On LAN" club. He is known for his stealthy Japanese AWP skill and affinity for cutting meat at Albertson's.
by ger November 29, 2004

In computing. Slashness refers to how path separator, commonly '/' and '\', is oriented in it's string representation.
Wally is mad at Windows(tm) reversed slashness path representation because he's losing precious time while every other OSes uses forward slashness.
by inrelationshipwitha68k August 31, 2023

Almost a significant other; as in "my ex": you dated, but decided to be "just friends", usually very good ones, but have since lost touch.
"Mike is my slash: we dated, were inseparable, but decided we were too weird together, as a couple (but then i moved in, so we could both $ave, b4 he went back down south to finish his degree)".
by tess jr April 18, 2013

* It possibly arose as a version of the ligature, Œ, of the digraph"Oe ", with the horizontal line of the "e" written across the "o".
* It possibly arose in Anglo-Saxon England as an O and an I written in the same place: compare Bede's Northumbria in Anglo-Saxon period spelling ''Coinualch'' for standard ''Cēnwealh'' (a man's name) (in a text in Latin). Later the letter ø disappeared from Anglo-Saxon as the Anglo-Saxon sound /ø/ changed to /e/, but by then use of the letter ø had spread from England to Scandinavia
* It possibly arose in Anglo-Saxon England as an O and an I written in the same place: compare Bede's Northumbria in Anglo-Saxon period spelling ''Coinualch'' for standard ''Cēnwealh'' (a man's name) (in a text in Latin). Later the letter ø disappeared from Anglo-Saxon as the Anglo-Saxon sound /ø/ changed to /e/, but by then use of the letter ø had spread from England to Scandinavia
by Qorptocx November 2, 2018

by dacnomaniac January 1, 2023
