slingshoot

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

sling +‎ shoot

Pronunciation[edit]

Verb[edit]

slingshoot (third-person singular simple present slingshoots, present participle slingshooting, simple past slingshot, past participle slingshotten)

  1. (informal, rare) Propel or launch with or as if with a slingshot.
    • 1959, Philip Roth, Goodbye, Columbus: And Five Short Stories, Houghton Mifflin, page 35:
      I did not like him and at times had the urge to yank back on his armbands and slingshoot him out past Otto and the lions into the street.
    • 1994, Jose Maria Lacambra, Rising Sun Blinking: A Young Boy’s Memoirs of the Japanese Occupation in the Philippines, Sinag-tala Publishers, →ISBN, page 11, →ISBN:
      I was always worried about Jesus’ harebrained schemes; something always seemed to go awry with them. Like the time he suggested we slingshoot a beehive off of a tree in his backyard.

Anagrams[edit]