slitch

Etymology 1
From, , , from , from , from , from.

Noun

 * 1)  Fine mud; silt; slake.
 * 2) * 1794, Hutchinson, Hist. Cum., I. 564, quoted in the EDD:
 * Lime is chiefly used as a manure, with clagg or slitch, as the farmers call it, being the wreck left by the tide on the shore.
 * 1) * 1928, Rodney True, quoted in Agricultural History, volumes 1-2, page 206:
 * The remainder of the essay is chiefly concerned with means of increasing fertility by the use of sea weed, leaves raked together by poor children, slitch carted from swamps, and sea salt.
 * 1) * 1928, Rodney True, quoted in Agricultural History, volumes 1-2, page 206:
 * The remainder of the essay is chiefly concerned with means of increasing fertility by the use of sea weed, leaves raked together by poor children, slitch carted from swamps, and sea salt.

Etymology 2

 * in the novel .

Noun

 * 1)  A.
 * 2) * 2008, Chris Crowe (possibly quoting Marhsall), Thurgood Marshall, page 27:
 * Anyone [Thurgood Marshall's mother] really hated she'd call a ‘slitch.’ Man or woman, anyone racially offensive was a ‘slitch,’ which was a cross between a slut and a bitch.
 * Anyone [Thurgood Marshall's mother] really hated she'd call a ‘slitch.’ Man or woman, anyone racially offensive was a ‘slitch,’ which was a cross between a slut and a bitch.