slugicide

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From slug +‎ -icide.

Noun[edit]

slugicide (countable and uncountable, plural slugicides)

  1. A substance that kills slugs.
    • 1906, Eden Phillpotts, My Garden, page 62:
      I have applied slugicides in every variety that the advertisements offer; but the slugs persist.
    • 1914, Dorothy Lowe, “Sowing seeds. Weeding. Mulching. Cuttings. Runners and Layers. Potting. Syringing. Pruning fruit trees and shrubs.”, in A Book of Simple Gardening, Cambridge: at the University Press, page 16:
      Certain slugicides are excellent preventives against slugs and do not hurt the seedlings;
    • 1931 November 13, M. Southern, “Alien”, in The Manchester Guardian, number 26,580, page 16, column 1:
      They all talk, telling of the Dorothies that did so well last year, the delphiniums the slugs ate, and getting advice thrown in with more Dorothies and cans of slugicide—guaranteed free of arsenic—and packets of seed.
    • 1937, New Zealand Journal of Agriculture, page 280:
      No experimental work has been conducted in New Zealand to determine the relative value of this compound as compared with other “slugicides,” but the writer has found it useful in checking an outbreak of slugs found to be infesting field cabbages.