/slʌmp/
OriginProbably of North Germanic origin: compare Danish slumpe (“to stumble upon by chance”), Norwegian slumpe (“happen by chance”), Norwegian slumpa (“happen by chance”), Swedish slumpa (“randomize; to sell off”), Swedish slump (“chance, randomness, happenstance”). Compare also German schlumpen (“to trail; draggle; be sloppy”), dialectal Dutch slompen (“to walk clumsily”).
- intransitiveTo collapse heavily or helplessly.
“Exhausted, he slumped down onto the sofa.”
““Heavens!” exclaimed Nina, “the blue-stocking and the fogy!—and yours are pale blue, Eileen!—you’re about as self-conscious as Drina—slumping there with your hair tumbling à la Mérode! Oh, it's very p”
- intransitiveTo decline or fall off in activity or performance.
“Real estate prices slumped during the recession.”
“The Gunners captain demonstrated his importance to the team by taking his tally to an outstanding 28 goals in 27 Premier League games as Chelsea slumped again after their shock defeat at QPR last week”
“But in the week ending December 6, usage slumped from 72% of pre-pandemic numbers to just 56%, following revised advice that we should work from home again.”
- intransitiveTo slouch or droop.
- transitiveTo lump; to throw together messily.
“These different groups[…]are exclusively slumped together under that sense.”
- To fall or sink suddenly through or in, when walking on a surface, as on thawing snow or ice, a bog, etc.
“The latter walk on a bottomless quag, into which unawares they may slump.”
- slang, transitiveTo cause to collapse; to hit hard; to render unconscious; to kill.
- A heavy or helpless collapse; a slouching or drooping posture; a period of poor activity or performance, especially an extended period.
- broadly, slangA period when a person goes without the expected amount of sex or dating.
“TOM. We haven't had sex with each other in five months.
MICHAEL. We're in a slump, I know that."”
- A measure of the fluidity of freshly mixed concrete, based on how much the concrete formed in a standard slump cone sags when the cone is removed.
- A form of mass wasting in which a coherent mass of loosely consolidated materials or a rock layer moves a short distance down a slope.
- broadlyA crater or depression (an area where the ground slumps) which forms as a result of such wasting. (A large crater is colloquially called a megaslump.)
“The biggest slump in the world - a mega-slump - is in the Russian taiga. Known as the Batagaika crater, it is a kilometre-long gash in the ground, about 70 metres deep, and growing[…]”
- UK, dialectalA boggy place.
“The road was all slumps of holes.”
“It was neither seemly nor befitting that so great an occasion should have its solemnity defaced by leaping-poles or four hands crossed cradlewise to convey the bridal finery over “slump” or “quakkin'-”
- ScotlandThe noise made by anything falling into a hole, or into a soft, miry place.
- ScotlandThe gross amount; the mass; the lump.
- A cobbler-like dessert cooked on a stove.
Formsslumps(present, singular, third-person) · slumping(participle, present) · slumped(participle, past) · slumped(past) · slumps(plural)