slopperyEtymologyBlend of slippery + sloppy or from slop + -ery (adjectival suffix).adjSlippery and messy.“The roads will be a bit sloppery, but Dobbin isn't too old to splash through them at a rattling pace.”advIn a messy and poorly done manner; sloppily“The investigator was expected to determine whether the place was "run sloppery, was it a messy looking place or not ..." and also if the premises were reasonably safe.”nounMessiness.“And clearly the sailor suit could not trace its true home to a country like ours, which goes in for a widespread concept of uniform usage best described as "sloppery."”Careless imprecision.“Extremes, they say, are prone to meet ; thus, while Yachting is, in matter of practical usage and etiquette, the most ultra exclusive of all our National Sports — presto, it has become the machinery for retail sloppery in the hire of pleasure boats.”Lack of clear-headedness; fuzzy thinking.“This was just — Sloppery. The humbug of the woe-of-the-world business filled her with scorn.”Watery unappetizing food; gruel.“Stews out of all such piddling sloppery, Starvation gruel.”A low-class drinking establishment.“So he jess goes an' sends one on 'em off to England an' 'tother to the south on a two year mishonerry trip, 'an then he comes along 'an claps his cock-eyed sign on the shebang 'an now it's: “All Saints Holy Zion's Co-operative distillery'” or sloppery, wichever ye like.”Anything that is sloppy.“It is a sloppery; a costume that never ought to be seen out of the precincts of a stable-yard.”