i Register
In some senses, slobber is marked as dated, slang, colloquial. Watch for register when choosing this word.
noun
Liquid material, generally saliva, that dribbles or drools outward and downward from the mouth.
There was dried slobber on his coat lapel.
A dribbly shower (of rain).
I looked about me in the slobber of rain, and found that I was in the middle of an irregular quadrangle, three sides of which were bordered by buildings of five or six storeys, newish, and furnished with small, not inelegant windows.
"Yon good slobber of rain fixed us nicely."
Mud, muck; a miry, slushy or muddy mixture.
For quotations using this term, see Citations:slobber.
A jellyfish.
verb
To allow saliva or liquid to run from one's mouth.
All babies slobber.
To fall thickly (viscously), like or as saliva.
[…] rain slobbered over New York. Fifty-eighth Street's construction debris ran in murky rivulets. Martin, Bagel and I walked single file on wood planks through Avon's rough board tunnel.
[…] rain slobbered over the window sills in rivers, the cloudburst making Jordan's departure impossible.
To wet with or as if with saliva; to coat with dribbly liquid.
[…] slobbering her neck with kisses while his hands were busy undressing her.
[…] slobbering her own kisses on his neck.
To kiss.
Finally, when they were all done slobbering around, old Sally introduced us.
To fellate.