different between slick vs casual

slick

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sl?k/
  • Rhymes: -?k

Etymology 1

From Middle English slicke, slike, slyke, from Old English sl?c (sleek, smooth; crafty, cunning, slick), from Proto-Germanic *sl?kaz (sleek, smooth),from Proto-Indo-European *sleyg-, *sley?- (to glide, smooth, spread). Akin to Dutch sluik, dialectal Dutch sleek (even, smooth), Old Norse slíkr (sleek, smooth), Old English slician (to make sleek, smooth, or glossy).

Adjective

slick (comparative slicker, superlative slickest)

  1. Slippery or smooth due to a covering of liquid; often used to describe appearances.
    This rain is making the roads slick.
    The top coating of lacquer gives this finish a slick look.
    His large round head was shaved slick.
  2. Appearing expensive or sophisticated.
    They read all kinds of slick magazines.
  3. Superficially convincing but actually untrustworthy.
    That new sales rep is slick. Be sure to read the fine print before you buy anything.
    • 2014, Ian Black, "Courts kept busy as Jordan works to crush support for Isis", The Guardian, 27 November 2014:
      The threat the most radical of them pose is evidently far greater at home than abroad: in one characteristically slick and chilling Isis video – entitled “a message to the Jordanian tyrant” – a smiling, long-haired young man in black pats the explosive belt round his waist as he burns his passport and his fellow fighters praise the memory of Zarqawi, who was killed in Iraq in 2006.
  4. (often used sarcastically) Clever, making an apparently hard task easy.
    Our new process for extracting needles from haystacks is extremely slick.
    That was a slick move, locking your keys in the car.
  5. (US, West Coast slang) Extraordinarily great or special.
    That is one slick bicycle: it has all sorts of features!
  6. sleek; smooth
Translations

Noun

slick (plural slicks)

  1. A covering of liquid, particularly oil.
  2. (by extension, hydrodynamics, US, dated) A rapidly-expanding ring of dark water, resembling an oil slick, around the site of a large underwater explosion at shallow depth, marking the progress through the water of the shock wave generated by the explosion.
  3. Someone who is clever and untrustworthy.
  4. A tool used to make something smooth or even.
  5. (sports, automotive) A tire with a smooth surface instead of a tread pattern, often used in auto racing.
    Synonyms: slick tire, slick tyre
  6. (US, military slang) A helicopter.
  7. (printing) A camera-ready image to be used by a printer. The "slick" is photographed to produce a negative image which is then used to burn a positive offset plate or other printing device.
  8. A wide paring chisel used in joinery.
Coordinate terms

(phenomenon from underwater explosion):

  • crack
Translations

Verb

slick (third-person singular simple present slicks, present participle slicking, simple past and past participle slicked)

  1. To make slick.
    The surface had been slicked.

Related terms

  • slick as snot
  • slick cam
  • slicker
  • slicken
  • slick back
  • slick down
  • slickstone
  • slick-tech
  • slick up

Etymology 2

Noun

slick

  1. Alternative form of schlich

Anagrams

  • Licks, licks

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  • what's slicker than oil
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casual

English

Alternative forms

  • casuall (obsolete)
  • (shortening, informal) cazh

Etymology

From Middle French casuel, from Late Latin c?su?lis (happening by chance), from Latin c?sus (event) (English case), from cadere (to fall) (whence English cadence).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?ka?u?l/, /?ka?ju?l/, /?kazju?l/, /?ka??l/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?kæ?u?l/, /?kæ?w?l/, /?kæ??l/
  • (General New Zealand) IPA(key): /?k????l/, /?k???l/
  • (obsolete) IPA(key): /-uæl/
  • Hyphenation: ca?su?al, cas?ual, casu?al

Adjective

casual (comparative more casual, superlative most casual)

  1. Happening by chance.
    • casual breaks, in the general system
  2. Coming without regularity; occasional or incidental.
    • a constant habit, rather than a casual gesture
  3. Employed irregularly.
  4. Careless.
    • 2007, Nick Holland, The Girl on the Bus (page 117)
      I removed my jacket and threw it casually over the back of the settee.
  5. Happening or coming to pass without design.
    • 2012, Jeff Miller, Grown at Glen Garden: Ben Hogan, Byron Nelson, and the Little Texas Golf Course that Propelled Them to Stardom
      Hogan assumed the entire creek bed was to be played as a casual hazard, moved his ball out and assessed himself a one-stroke penalty.
  6. Informal, relaxed.
  7. Designed for informal or everyday use.

Synonyms

  • (happening by chance): accidental, fortuitous, incidental, occasional, random; see also Thesaurus:accidental
  • (happening or coming to pass without design): unexpected
  • (relaxed; everyday use): informal

Antonyms

  • (happening by chance): inevitable, necessary
  • (happening or coming to pass without design): expected, scheduled
  • (relaxed; everyday use): ceremonial, formal

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

casual (plural casuals)

  1. (Britain, Australia, New Zealand) A worker who is only working for a company occasionally, not as its permanent employee.
  2. A soldier temporarily at a place of duty, usually en route to another place of duty.
  3. (Britain) A member of a group of football hooligans who wear expensive designer clothing to avoid police attention; see casual (subculture).
  4. One who receives relief for a night in a parish to which he does not belong; a vagrant.
  5. (video games, informal, derogatory) A player of casual games.
  6. (fandom slang) A person whose engagement with media is relaxed or superficial.
    • 1972, Lee C. Garrison, "The Needs of Motion Picture Audiences", California Management Review, Volume 15, Issue 2, Winter 1972, page 149:
      Casuals outnumbered regulars in the art-house audience two to one.
    • 2010, Jennifer Gillan, Television and New Media: Must-Click TV, page 16:
      Most often, when a series is marketed toward casuals, the loyals feel that their interests and needs are not being met.
    • 2018, E. J. Nielsen, "The Gay Elephant Meta in the Room: Sherlock and the Johnlock Conspiracy", in Queerbaiting and Fandom: Teasing Fans Through Homoerotic Possibilities (ed. Joseph Brennan), page 91:
      Treating a gay relationship as a puzzle that must be pursued by the clever viewers and hidden from “casuals” until a narrative reveal at the eleventh hour seems antithetical to the idea of normalized representation that TJLCers claim as the main reason they want Johnlock to be canon, []
  7. (Britain, dated) A tramp.

Translations

Related terms

  • casualty
  • case

References

  • casual in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.

Anagrams

  • Calusa, casula, causal

Catalan

Adjective

casual (masculine and feminine plural casuals)

  1. casual
  2. unplanned

Derived terms

  • casualitat
  • casualment

Portuguese

Adjective

casual m or f (plural casuais, comparable)

  1. casual (happening by chance)
    Synonym: fortuito
  2. casual (coming without regularity)
    Synonym: ocasional
  3. casual (designed for informal or everyday use)

Spanish

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -al

Adjective

casual (plural casuales)

  1. casual
  2. accidental
  3. coincidental, chance

Derived terms

  • casualmente

Descendants

  • ? Cebuano: kaswal

Further reading

  • “casual” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.

casual From the web:

  • what casual mean
  • what casual shoes are in style 2020
  • what casualties did the animals suffer
  • what casual dating mean
  • what casualty means
  • what casual shoes to wear with jeans
  • what casual dress means
  • what casual relationship mean
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