slot

Etymology 1

Middle Low German slot or Middle Dutch slot, ultimately from Proto-Germanic *slutą. Cognate with German Schloss (“door-bolt”), Dutch slot. The verb is probably from Middle Dutch sluten (“to close, to lock”) (Modern Dutch sluiten (“to close”)).

noun

  1. A broad, flat, wooden bar, a slat, especially as used to secure a door, window, etc.
  2. A metal bolt or wooden bar, especially as a crosspiece.
  3. (Scotland, Northern England) An implement for barring, bolting, locking or securing a door, box, gate, lid, window or the like.

verb

  1. (obsolete, Scotland, Northern England) To bar, bolt or lock a door or window.
  2. (obsolete, transitive, UK, dialectal) To shut with violence; to slam.
    to slot a door

Etymology 2

From Old French esclot, likely from Old Norse slóð (“track”). As a gambling machine, via clipping of slot machine. Compare sleuth.

noun

  1. A narrow depression, perforation, or aperture; especially, one for the reception of a piece fitting or sliding in it.
  2. A period of time within a schedule or sequence.
    I've booked your haircut for the 2 p.m. slot.
  3. (gambling, informal, especially in the plural) Clipping of slot machine, a game of chance played for money using a coin slot.
    I walked past the poker tables and went straight to the slots.
  4. The track of an animal, especially a deer; spoor.
    The Huntsman by his slot, or breaking earth, perceaves 1612, Michael Drayton, Poly-Olbion, song 13 p. 216
    One is from Hexamshire; he is wont to trace the Tynedale and Teviotdale thieves, as a bloodhound follows the slot of a hurt deer. 1819, Walter Scott, Ivanhoe
    But by then Niënor had passed away like a wraith; and neither sight nor slot of her could they find, though they hunted far northward and searched for many days. 2007, J.R.R. Tolkien, The Tale of the Children of Húrin, page 212
  5. (Antarctica) A crack or fissure in a glacier or snowfield; a chasm; a crevasse.
    By this time of winter the edge of the ice is rafted up in confused floes, and often reveals slots and fissures quite large enough to hold a young husky prisoner. 1963, John Mayston Béchervaise, Blizzard and Fire, page 111
    Brian's crevasse shot also needed additional detail, so we found a small slot on a tiny glacier above the Cove. 1991, Stephen Venables, Island at the Edge of the World, page 161
  6. (slang) The vagina.
  7. (aviation) The allocated time for an aircraft's departure or arrival at an airport's runway.
  8. (computing) A space in memory or on disk etc. in which a particular type of object can be stored.
    The game offers four save slots.
  9. (aviation) In a flying display, the fourth position; after the leader and two wingmen.
  10. (slang, surfing) The barrel or tube of a wave.
  11. (field hockey or ice hockey) A rectangular area directly in front of the net and extending toward the blue line.
  12. (American football) The area between the last offensive lineman on either side of the center and the wide receiver on that side.
  13. (electrical) A channel opening in the stator or rotor of a rotating machine for ventilation and insertion of windings.
    According to Pro Football Focus, Simmons, listed at 6-foot-4 and 238 pounds, played at least 100 snaps at five positions — slot cornerback, edge rusher, linebacker and both safety spots — and finished with 16½ tackles for a loss, eight sacks, eight pass deflections and three interceptions. April 24 2020, Ken Belson, Ben Shpigel, “Full Round 1 2020 N.F.L. Picks and Analysis”, in New York Time
    She'd like him jammed into her slot, like him to crank into her and she didn't think ignition would be far off if he did. 2006, Shelby Reed, Madison Hayes, Love a Younger Man, page 165
    Valerie sighed with pleasure as her husband skillfully found her slot and inserted the head of his straining prick inside, then bucked its thick-stemmed length all the way up her sex-channel. 2006, Rod Waleman, The Stepdaughters, page 20
  14. (journalism) The inside of the "rim" or semicircular copy desk, occupied by the supervisor of the copy editors.
    The slot is not a glamorous job. It hasn't been discovered by Shubert Alley or the fiction magazines. To the cub reporter, eager for by-lines and self-expression, the whole copy desk looks like a backwater. 1940, LIFE, volume 8, number 17, page 111

verb

  1. To put something (such as a coin) into a slot (narrow aperture)
  2. To assign something or someone into a slot (gap in a schedule or sequence)
  3. To create a slot (narrow aperture or groove), as for example by cutting or machining.
  4. To put something where it belongs.
    And Stamford Bridge erupted with joy as Florent Malouda slotted in a cross from Drogba, who had stayed just onside. December 29, 2010, Chris Whyatt, “Chelsea 1 - 0 Bolton”, in BBC
  5. (slang, Britain, Rhodesia, sometimes elsewhere in the Commonwealth) To kill.
    One young soldier told me he couldn't bear to shoot the wild game in Rhodesia, but he had no trouble "slotting" floppies. "The more I kill," he said, "the better I feel. They're ruining everything for us." 1978 Spring, Collins Reynolds, editor, The Bridge, volume 3, number 1, Center for Research and Education, page 31
    Two males and a female from Northern Ireland had been identified, tracked and 'slotted'. 2012, Davy Thompson, Uniforms and Boats, page 59
    They fired into the air on automatic and I thought, here we go, all I need is for one of these rounds to come down and slot me through the head. 2013, Andy McNab, Bravo Two Zero: The 20th Anniversary Edition, page 184
  6. (Antarctica) To fall, or cause to fall, into a crevasse.
    The D-4s being heavy vehicles, were in difficulties with crevasses right from the start. At one stage Wood said cheerfully, "Let's give the game away after we get a D-4 slotted one more time", expecting just to get a track break through over a hole. The next minute his machine with him in it disappeared from sight — the tail and the tip of the blade caught and held a little way down the bottomless hole. Reiffel brought his D-4 around on the ice with the big machine picking its way between slots like a ballet dancer, and after a lot of work with ice axes, the slotted machine was hauled out. 1967 June, “Australians' Autumn Journeys Have Perilous Moments”, in Antarctic, volume 4, number 10, New Zealand Antarctic Society, pages 503–504
    I'd have to avoid getting slotted, especially as I didn't know which danger it was, but I thought I could guess. 2012, Hazel Edwards, Antarctica's Frozen Chosen
  7. (Australian rules football, rugby, informal) To kick the ball between the posts for a goal; to score a goal by doing this.

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