1 to (cause liquid to) splash, spill, or move around violently in a container -- skvette, skvalpe, søle
We cannot afford to let such huge amounts of hot money go slopping around the world money markets.
There is a lot of revulsion at the habit of slopping out.
When we came to office, the date for the ending of slopping out that we inherited was well into the 21st century.
Instead, salt is piled on the side of lunch plates, the gravy slopped over it, and a salt meal results.
They will risk being slopped so long as they are not inebriated to a point which is likely to show in their ordinary driving.
One witness said that the slops were emptied in this way two or three times a week.
In how many prisons has slopping out returned—on however limited a scale—as a result of bringing back into use old accommodation?
In how many prisons has slopping out, which we eliminated completely, returned as a result of bringing old accommodation back into use?