Idioms for slap

    slap on the wrist, relatively mild criticism or censure: He got away with a slap on the wrist.

Origin of slap

1
First recorded in 1625–35, slap is from the Low German word slapp, slappe; of expressive orig.

synonym study for slap

1. See blow1.

OTHER WORDS FROM slap

slap·per, noun

British Dictionary definitions for slap down (1 of 2)

slap down

verb

(tr, adverb) informal to rebuke sharply, as for impertinence

British Dictionary definitions for slap down (2 of 2)

slap
/ (slæp) /

noun

verb slaps, slapping or slapped

adverb informal

exactly; directly slap on time
forcibly or abruptly to fall slap on the floor

Derived forms of slap

slapper, noun

Word Origin for slap

C17: from Low German slapp, German Schlappe, of imitative origin

Idioms and Phrases with slap down

slap down

Restrain or correct emphatically, as in They thought he was getting far too arrogant and needed to be slapped down. This idiom, which literally means “inflict a physical blow,” began to be used figuratively in the first half of the 1900s.