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slug

Did you mean: slug (gastropod), slug, Slug (mass), Slug (projectile), Slug (rapper), Slug (railroad), Slug (comics), Slug (typesetting), Slug (production), Slug (coin)

 
Dictionary: slug1   (slŭg) pronunciation
 
n.
  1. A round bullet larger than buckshot.
  2. Informal.
    1. A shot of liquor.
    2. An amount of liquid, especially liquor, that is swallowed in one gulp; a swig.
  3. A small metal disk for use in a vending or gambling machine, especially one used illegally.
  4. A lump of metal or glass prepared for further processing.
  5. Printing.
    1. A strip of type metal, less than type-high and thicker than a lead, used for spacing.
    2. A line of cast type in a single strip of metal.
    3. A compositor's type line of identifying marks or instructions, inserted temporarily in copy.
  6. Physics. The unit of mass that is accelerated at the rate of one foot per second per second when acted on by a force of one pound weight.
tr.v., slugged, slug·ging, slugs.
  1. Printing. To add slugs to.
  2. Informal. To drink rapidly or in large gulps: slugged down a can of pop.

[Perhaps from SLUG2 (from its shape).]


slug2 (slŭg) pronunciation
n.
  1. Any of various small, snaillike, chiefly terrestrial gastropod mollusks of the genus Limax and related genera, having a slow-moving elongated body with no shell or only a flat rudimentary shell on or under the skin.
  2. The smooth soft larva of certain insects, such as the sawfly.
  3. A slimy mass of aggregated amoeboid cells from which the sporophore of a cellular slime mold develops.
  4. Informal. A sluggard.

[Middle English slugge, sluggard, probably of Scandinavian origin.]


slug3 (slŭg) pronunciation
tr.v., slugged, slug·ging, slugs.

To strike heavily, especially with the fist or a bat.

n.

A hard heavy blow, as with the fist or a baseball bat.

[Possibly from SLUG1.]


slug4 (slŭg) pronunciation
intr.v., slugged, slug·ging, slugs.

To wait for or obtain a ride to work by standing at a roadside hoping to be picked up by a driver who needs another passenger to use the HOV lanes of a highway.

n.

A commuter who slugs.

[Probably from SLUG2.]


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A terrestrial pulmonate mollusk in which the shell is absent or reduced to a small internal or external rudiment. The slug form has evolved independently several times. The incorporation into the muscular foot region of the body organs (which are contained within the shell in other mollusks) results in a streamlined body shape (see illustration), enabling the animal to enter small holes or crevices.

<i>Limax maximus</i>. There are two pairs of tentacles on the head, and the opening to the lung is clearly visible.
Limax maximus. There are two pairs of tentacles on the head, and the opening to the lung is clearly visible.

Lung respiration occurs as in other pulmonates, but skin respiration is probably at least as important.

A few slugs are carnivorous, such as Testacella which eats earthworms, but the majority are herbivores and may become serious horticultural and agricultural pests. See also Pulmonata.


 

A metal bar containing the carved image of a letter or digit that is used in a printing mechanism.

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Advertising: signature of an advertiser on a print advertisement. The slug can be a distinctive logo, trademark, or simply the name of the advertiser (with or without the address) placed in the advertisement for identification.

Printing:

1. A one-piece line of type that is cast by machine, rather than by hand.

2. Piece of metal usually measuring six points in thickness used for spacing between lines of type.

Television production: blank footage inserted into a film or videotape to represent a program or portion thereof that is still to come. The slug will be the exact length of the forthcoming piece so that the running time of the footage will be the same as that of the finished product.

 
Thesaurus: slug1
Top

noun

    A small amount of liquor: dram, drop, jigger, shot, sip, tot1. Informal nip2. Slang snort. See big/small/amount, ingestion.
slug2

noun

    A self-indulgent person who spends time avoiding work or other useful activity: bum1, drone1, fainéant, good-for-nothing, idler, layabout, loafer, ne'er-do-well, no-good, slugabed, sluggard, wastrel. Informal do-little, do-nothing, lazybones. Slang slouch. See industrious/lazy.
slug3

verb

    To deliver a powerful blow to suddenly and sharply: bash, catch, clout, hit, knock, pop1, slam, slog, smash, smite, sock, strike, swat, thwack, whack, wham, whop. Informal biff, bop, clip1, wallop. Slang belt, conk, paste. Idioms: let someone have it, sock it to someone. See attack/defend, strike/miss.

noun

    A sudden sharp, powerful stroke: bang, blow2, clout, crack, hit, lick, pound, sock, swat, thwack, welt, whack, wham, whop. Informal bash, biff, bop, clip1, wallop. Slang belt, conk, paste. See attack/defend, strike/miss.

 

gee pound, g pound

mass BI-f.p.s. The coherent unit of mass in the gravitational system of the Imperial system, identically ft·lb-f-1·s2, i.e. the mass accelerated at the rate of one foot per second per second by the force that is the true pound (the ‘pound-force’); 1 slug = 14.593 9~ kg (32.174~ lb-mass). The latter number is the standardized value, within BI, of Earth's surficial gravitational acceleration, i.e. g; hence also gee pound.

 

Any species of gastropod that glides along on a broad tapered foot and has no shell or one that is merely an internal plate or a series of granules. Most slugs use the mantle cavity (see mollusk) as a lung. Slugs have a soft, slimy body and live in moist habitats on land (except for one freshwater species). All are hermaphroditic. In temperate regions, the common slugs eat fungi and decaying leaves. Some tropical species eat plants, and some European species eat other snails and earthworms. See also nudibranch.

For more information on slug, visit Britannica.com.

 
slug, name for a terrestrial gastropod mollusk in which the characteristic molluscan shell is reduced to a thin plate embedded in the tissues. Like the terrestrial snails of the same order, slugs have a distinct head with a mouth, tentacles bearing eyes, and a lung for breathing air. They move on a muscular foot over a trail of slime which they secrete. Certain species, such as Limax maximus, have become serious pests in gardens and truck farms, particularly in the W United States. Gliding out to feed at night, they devour both the roots and aerial portions of plants with their rasplike radula. Terrestrial slugs are classified in the phylum Mollusca, class Gastropoda, order Stylommatophora.


 
Unit Conversions: slugs
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To convert from slugs to:

kilogram, multiply by 14.59.
pounds, multiply by 32.17.

Convert:  Into: 
Result: 

 
Abbreviations: SLUG
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is short for:

Meaning Category
Sintok Linux User GroupComputing->General
Skane Linux User GroupComputing->General
Slug Linux Unix GroupComputing->General
Squid Log Usage GeneratorComputing->Networking
Steve's Library Of Useful GoodiesInternet
Susitna Linux User's GroupComputing->General

Click here to submit an acronym.


 

A slimy, night-feeding mollusk without a shell that feeds on plants. It thrives in shady moist soil.

slug

 
Wikipedia: Slug
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Slug

Limax maximus, an air-breathing land slug
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukarya
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Superorder: Heterobranchia
Order: Pulmonata

Slug is a common non-scientific word, which is often applied to any gastropod mollusc whatsoever that has a very reduced shell, a small internal shell, or no shell at all. Gastropods with coiled shells that are big enough to retract into are called snails. Land gastropods with a shell that is not quite vestigial, but is too small to retract into, like many in the family Urocyclidae, are known as "semislugs".

A slug-like body is an adaptation which has occurred many times in various groups of snails, both marine and terrestrial, but the common name "slug" is most frequently encountered as applied to air-breathing land species, including a few agricultural and horticultural pest species.

Evolutionarily speaking, the loss or reduction of the shell in gastropods is a derived characteristic; the same basic body design has independently evolved many times, making slugs a strikingly polyphyletic group. In other words, the shell-less condition has arisen many times in the evolutionary past, so the various different taxonomic families of slugs, even just of land slugs, are not closely related to one another, despite a superficial similarity in the overall form of the body.

The word "slug" or "sea slug" is also used for many marine species, almost all of which have gills. The largest group of marine shell-less gastropods or sea slugs are the nudibranchs. There are in addition many other groups of sea slug such as the heterobranch sea butterflies, sea angels, and sea hares, as well as the only very distantly related, pelagic, caenogastropod sea slugs, which are within the superfamily Carinarioidea. There is even an air-breathing sea slug, Onchidella.

This article is primarily about air breathing (pulmonate) land slugs.

Tropical leatherleaf slug, Laevicaulis alte

Contents

Land slugs

Lehmannia nyctelia feeding on a mushroom in Victoria, British Columbia

Land slugs, like all other slow-moving gastropods, undergo torsion (a 180º twisting of the internal organs) during development. Internally the anatomy of a slug clearly shows the effects of this rotation, but externally the bodies of slugs appear rather symmetrical, except for the positioning of the pneumostome, which is on one side of the animal, normally the right hand side.

The soft, slimy bodies of slugs are prone to desiccation, so land-living slugs are confined to moist environments and are forced to retreat to damp hiding places when the weather is dry.

Morphology and behaviour

Anatomy of a slug

Like other snails, slugs macerate food using their radula, a rough, tongue-like organ with many tiny tooth-like denticles.

Like other pulmonate land snails, most slugs have two pairs of 'feelers' or tentacles on their head; the upper pair being light sensors, while the lower pair provides the sense of smell. Both pairs are retractable and can be regrown if lost.

On top of the slug, behind the head, is the saddle-shaped mantle, and under this are the genital opening and anus. On one side (almost always the right hand side) of the mantle is a respiratory opening, which is easy to see when open, but difficult to see when closed. This opening is known as the pneumostome. Within the mantle in some species is a very small rather flat shell.

Like other snails, a slug moves by rhythmic waves of muscular contraction on the underside of its foot. It simultaneously secretes a layer of mucus on which it travels, which helps prevent damage to the tissues of the foot.

Some species of slugs hibernate underground during the winter in temperate climates, but in other species, the adults die in the autumn.

Mucus

An Arion species of slug in Vancouver's VanDusen Botanical Garden

Slugs' bodies are made up mostly of water, and without a full-sized shell to retreat into, their soft tissues are prone to desiccation. They must generate protective mucus to survive. Many species are most active after rain. In drier conditions they hide in damp places under tree bark, fallen logs, rocks, and man-made structures such as planters and so forth, in order to help retain body moisture.

Slugs produce two types of mucus: one which is thin and watery, and another which is thick and sticky. Both kinds of mucus are hygroscopic. The thin mucus is spread out from the centre of the foot to the edges, whereas the thick mucus spreads out from front to back. They also produce thick mucus which coats the whole body of the animal.

The mucus secreted by the foot contains fibres which help prevent the slug from slipping down vertical surfaces. The "slime trail" that a slug leaves behind it has some secondary effects: other slugs coming across a slime trail can recognize others of the same species, which is useful in preparation to mating. Following a slime trail is also a necessary part of the hunting behavior of some carnivorous predatory slugs.

Body mucus provides some protection against predators, as it can make the slug hard to pick up and hold, for example in a bird's beak.

Some species of slug secrete slime cords to lower themselves onto the ground, or to suspend a pair of slugs during copulation.

Reproduction

Close-up of mating great grey slugs

Slugs are hermaphrodites, having both female and male reproductive organs.

Once a slug has located a mate, they encircle each other and sperm is exchanged through their protruded genitalia. A few days later around 30 eggs are laid into a hole in the ground, or beneath the cover of objects such as fallen log.

A commonly seen practice among many slugs is apophallation. The penis of these species is curled like a cork-screw and often becomes entangled in their mate's genitalia in the process of exchanging sperm. When all else fails, apophallation allows the slugs to separate themselves by one or both of the slugs chewing off the other's penis. Once its penis has been removed, a slug is still able to mate subsequently, but using only the female parts of its reproductive system.

Ecology

Arion lusitanicus feeding on green leaves.

The recently discovered ghost slug
hunts and eats earthworms

A. muscaria is prone to slug attack,
as are many other fungi

Many species of slugs play an important role in ecosystems by eating dead leaves, fungus, and decaying vegetable material. Other species eat parts of living plants.

Some slugs are predators, eating other slugs and snails, or earthworms.

Most slugs will on occasion also eat carrion, including dead of their own kind.

Predators

Frogs, toads, snakes, hedgehogs, Salamanders, eastern box turtles, humans and also some birds and beetles are slug predators.

Slugs, when attacked, can contract their body, making themselves harder and more compact, and thus more difficult for many animals to grasp when combined with the slippery texture of the mucus that coats the animal. The unpleasant taste of the mucus is also a deterrent.

Human relevance

Most slugs are harmless to humans and their interests, but a small number of species of slugs are great pests of agriculture and horticulture. They feed on fruits and vegetables prior to harvest, making holes in the crop, which can make individual items unsuitable to sell for aesthetic reasons and which can make the crop more vulnerable to rot and disease.


As control measures, special pesticides are used in large-scale agriculture, while small home gardens may use slug tape as a deterrent to keep slugs out of crop areas.

In a few rare cases, humans have contracted parasite-induced meningitis from eating raw slugs [1].

A banana slug, Ariolimax dolichophallus, named "Sammy" is the mascot of the University of California at Santa Cruz.

In rural southern Italy, the garden slug Arion hortensis is used to treat gastritis or stomach ulcer by swallowing it whole and alive. A clear mucous produced by the slug is used to treat various skin conditions including dermatitis, warts, inflammations, calluses, acne and wounds. [2].

Subinfraorders, superfamilies, and families

Arion rufus, red color form on a rhubarb leaf

Triboniophorus graeffei,
Australia's largest land slug

Banana slug, Ariolimax columbianus
Various species of British land slugs, including (from the top) the larger drawings: Arion ater, Limax flavus, Limax maximus
  • Subinfraorder Orthurethra
    • Superfamily Achatinelloidea Gulick, 1873
    • Superfamily Cochlicopoidea Pilsbry, 1900
    • Superfamily Partuloidea Pilsbry, 1900
    • Superfamily Pupilloidea Turton, 1831
  • Subinfraorder Sigmurethra
    • Superfamily Acavoidea Pilsbry, 1895
    • Superfamily Achatinoidea Swainson, 1840
    • Superfamily Aillyoidea Baker, 1960
    • Superfamily Arionoidea J.E. Gray in Turnton, 1840
    • Superfamily Athoracophoroidea
    • Superfamily Orthalicoidea
    • Superfamily Camaenoidea Pilsbry, 1895
    • Superfamily Clausilioidea Mörch, 1864
    • Superfamily Dyakioidea Gude & Woodward, 1921
    • Superfamily Gastrodontoidea Tryon, 1866
    • Superfamily Helicoidea Rafinesque, 1815
    • Superfamily Helixarionoidea Bourguignat, 1877
    • Superfamily Limacoidea Rafinesque, 1815
    • Superfamily Oleacinoidea H. & A. Adams, 1855
    • Superfamily Orthalicoidea Albers-Martens, 1860
    • Superfamily Plectopylidoidea Moellendorf, 1900
    • Superfamily Polygyroidea Pilsbry, 1894
    • Superfamily Punctoidea Morse, 1864
    • Superfamily Rhytidoidea Pilsbry, 1893
    • Superfamily Sagdidoidera Pilsbry, 1895
    • Superfamily Staffordioidea Thiele, 1931
    • Superfamily Streptaxoidea J.E. Gray, 1806
    • Superfamily Strophocheiloidea Thiele, 1926
    • Superfamily Parmacelloidea
    • Superfamily Zonitoidea Mörch, 1864

References

External links


 
Translations: Slug
Top

Dansk (Danish)
1.
n. - kugle, slurk, tår, snegl, spillemønt, hårdt slag, steg (til spatiering)
v. tr. - sluge, hælde ned

2.
v. tr. - slå hårdt
n. - hårdt slag

Nederlands (Dutch)
naaktslak, slag, drankje, eenheid van massa, kogel, muntschijfje, gezette regel

Français (French)
1.
n. - (Zool) limace, balle, pruneau (fam), lampée, (US) jeton trafiqué
v. tr. - boire une lampée, (Imprim) ajouter des caractères à

2.
v. tr. - frapper violemment
n. - coup

Deutsch (German)
1.
n. - Nacktschnecke, Larve
v. - schlagen

2.
v. - schlagen
n. - Schlag

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (ζωολ.) γυμνοσάλιαγκας, (καθομ.) βόλι, σφαίρα, βλήμα, πλίνθωμα, σβόλος, στρογγυλό κομμάτι μετάλλου
v. - χτυπώ, κοπανώ, φυτεύω σφαίρα, κατεβάζω (ποτό)

idioms:

  • slug it out    αντέχω, υπομένω

Italiano (Italian)
lumacone

idioms:

  • slug it out    prendersi a pugni, tener duro

Português (Portuguese)
n. - bala (f), preguiçoso (m), lesma (f), pepita (f)
v. - deformar-se, apanhar

idioms:

  • slug it out    duas pessoas brigam para machucar

Русский (Russian)
слизняк, увалень, пуля, кусок металла или пластика, самородок, золотая монета в 50 долларов, жетон, сильный удар кулаком, сильное разочарование, крепкий напиток, глоток спиртного, лениться, препятствовать движению, стрелять, вести бой, сильно бить

idioms:

  • slug it out    добиваться (успеха) изо всех сил

Español (Spanish)
1.
n. - babosa, bala, trago de licor
v. tr. - tomar algo de un trago, (imprenta) agregar lingotes

2.
v. tr. - aporrear, dar puñetazos
n. - puñetazo

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - snigel, kula, metallklump, spelpollett, falskt mynt, rad (typogr), slurk, tår, klunk
v. - dänga till, slänga till, damma på, puckla på, drämma till

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
1. 强击, 重击, 强打

idioms:

  • slug it out    决一雌雄, 比出个上下

2. 一大口, 一小杯

3. 插嵌片于

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
1.
n. - 強擊, 重擊
v. tr. - 重擊, 強打, 強擊

idioms:

  • slug it out    決一雌雄, 比出個上下

2.
v. tr. - 插嵌片於

3.
n. - 一大口, 一小杯

한국어 (Korean)
1.
n. - 둥근 탄환, 달팽이
v. tr. - 크게 한 모금 마시다, ~에 탄알을 재다

2.
v. tr. - 주먹으로 구타하다, 배트로 강타하다
n. - 강타

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - ナメクジ, のろのろしたもの, 弾丸, 偽造硬貨, 強打, のろのろした動物
v. - 強く殴る, かっ飛ばす

idioms:

  • slug it out    闘い抜く

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) شخص أو حيوان بطيء, ألكسلان, ألبزاقه ألعريانه (فعل) يفصل ما بين ألسطور ألمنضدة برقائق, يضرب بقوة‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮שבלול, חילזון חסר-קונכייה, אסימון, כדור, קליע, שורת-סדר, לגימה של שתייה חריפה‬
v. tr. - ‮לגם לגימה גדולה, הוסיף שורת-סדר‬
v. tr. - ‮חבט בעוצמה‬
n. - ‮חבטה בעלת עוצמה‬


 
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Did you mean: slug (gastropod), slug, Slug (mass), Slug (projectile), Slug (rapper), Slug (railroad), Slug (comics), Slug (typesetting), Slug (production), Slug (coin)


 

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