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Slate   /sleɪt/   Listen
noun
Slate  n.  
1.
(Min.) An argillaceous rock which readily splits into thin plates; argillite; argillaceous schist.
2.
Any rock or stone having a slaty structure.
3.
A prepared piece of such stone. Especially:
(a)
A thin, flat piece, for roofing or covering houses, etc.
(b)
A tablet for writing upon.
4.
An artificial material, resembling slate, and used for the above purposes.
5.
A thin plate of any material; a flake. (Obs.)
6.
(Politics) A list of candidates, prepared for nomination or for election; a list of candidates, or a programme of action, devised beforehand. (Cant, U.S.)
Adhesive slate (Min.), a kind of slate of a greenish gray color, which absorbs water rapidly, and adheres to the tongue; whence the name.
Aluminous slate, or Alum slate (Min.), a kind of slate containing sulphate of alumina, used in the manufacture of alum.
Bituminous slate (Min.), a soft species of sectile clay slate, impregnated with bitumen.
Hornblende slate (Min.), a slaty rock, consisting essentially of hornblende and feldspar, useful for flagging on account of its toughness.
Slate ax or Slate axe, a mattock with an ax end, used in shaping slates for roofs, and making holes in them for the nails.
Slate clay (Geol.), an indurated clay, forming one of the alternating beds of the coal measures, consisting of an infusible compound of alumina and silica, and often used for making fire bricks.
Slate globe, a globe the surface of which is made of an artificial slatelike material.
Slate pencil, a pencil of slate, or of soapstone, used for writing on a slate.
Slate rocks (Min.), rocks which split into thin laminae, not necessarily parallel to the stratification; foliated rocks.
Slate spar (Min.), a variety of calcite of silvery white luster and of a slaty structure.
Transparent slate, a plate of translucent material, as ground glass, upon which a copy of a picture, placed beneath it, can be made by tracing.



verb
Slate  v. t.  (past & past part. slated; pres. part. slating)  
1.
To cover with slate, or with a substance resembling slate; as, to slate a roof; to slate a globe.
2.
To register (as on a slate and subject to revision), for an appointment. (Polit. Cant)



Slate  v. t.  (Written also slete)  To set a dog upon; to bait; to slat. See 2d Slat, 3. (Prov. Eng. & Scot.)






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Slate" Quotes from Famous Books



... They are all of the same era, and possibly the work of the same hand, being among the most interesting of our Norman fonts. The material of which they are made has never been settled, some authorities defining it as Tournai marble, others as basalt, and yet others as nothing more than slate. ...
— Winchester • Sidney Heath

... Rain drummed against the slate roof of Peter's house and reverberated through the rooms to where Mirestone and the Dutchman sat by the fire in silence. Mirestone broke the still atmosphere by putting forth a question that Peter somehow knew would be coming ...
— The White Feather Hex • Don Peterson

... the manuscript, or substituted a wrong one, were alike worthy of remark. And when at last, endeavouring to communicate with the deaf gentleman by means of the finger alphabet, with which he constructed such words as are unknown in any civilised or savage language, he took up a slate and wrote in large text, one word in a line, the question, 'How - do - you - like - it?' - when he did this, and handing it over the table awaited the reply, with a countenance only brightened and improved by his great excitement, even Mr. Miles relaxed, and could not forbear looking ...
— Master Humphrey's Clock • Charles Dickens

... despite its tiny size, had no uniform system of roofing; in some spots tiles were substituted by strips of tin with heavy rocks holding them in place and the interstices chinked with straw; in others, the slate was mortared together with mud; in still others, sheets of zinc ...
— The Quest • Pio Baroja

... unmarked byways running through a distressingly poor-looking and apparently quite thinly inhabited country. After a deal of studying the map and the infrequent sign-boards we brought up in a desolate-looking little village, merely a row of gray stone, slate-roofed houses on either side of the way, and devoid of a single touch of the picturesque which so often atones for the poverty of the English cottages. No plot of shrubbery or flower-garden broke the gray monotony ...
— British Highways And Byways From A Motor Car - Being A Record Of A Five Thousand Mile Tour In England, - Wales And Scotland • Thomas D. Murphy


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