The word shod is the past tense form of the verb shoe, meaning "to furnish with a shoe"; hence, we can speak of shoeing horses and horses that have been shod or shodden. When the word slipshod was first used in the late 1500s, it meant "wearing loose shoes or slippers"—such slippers were once called slip-shoes—and later it was used to describe shoes that were falling apart. By the early 1800s, slipshod was used more generally as a synonym for shabby—in 1818, Sir Walter Scott wrote about "the half-bound and slip-shod volumes of the circulating library." The association with shabbiness then shifted to an association with sloppiness, and the word was used to mean "careless" or "slovenly."
Examples of slipshod in a Sentence
He did a slipshod job.
Her scholarship is slipshod at best.
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At the same time, his work was cynical, impersonal, lazy and, at times, slipshod.—
Victoria Dalkey,
Sacramento Bee,
31 Jan. 2024 In other words, the track was intentionally slipshod.—
Kyle Chayka,
New Yorker,
13 Aug. 2025 Musk has become a bogeyman for Democrats, who say his cuts to government are slipshod and putting Americans at risk.—
Tara Suter,
The Hill,
19 Mar. 2025 Upon its release, the strategy was criticized for its slipshod quality and lack of strategy recommendations.—
Juliette Kayyem,
The Atlantic,
19 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for slipshod