[ verb ] eat noisily <verb.consumption> He slurped his soup
Michael Montolbano, the doorman at Pat O'Briens where tourists slurp rosy-colored Hurricanes in a glass they can take home, said some Republicans have already experienced the street.
But when you have no fresh blossom, a slurp of elderflower syrup provides an instant and sublime remedy.
The best are often close to pandemonium, with a din inside, and milling crowds wait-listed outside. Chinese eaters spit bits of inedible food out onto their plates, burp loudly, and slurp soup.
Real New Yorkers drink the water, judged by Consumer Reports to be superior to many bottled brands, and slurp coffee from an infinite number of blue-and-white cardboard "Greek Design" coffee cups made in suburban Westchester County.
With more beans to judge these days the tasters must slurp more mouthfuls of coffee.
They may burp and belch; they may slurp soup or tea with great gusto; they may spit shell and other inedibles onto the tablecloth by the plate.
'No,' he added, starting up from his chair and taking a last slurp of coffee, 'the problem of our democracies is that the citizens don't feel close to those who take the decisions.
There is really no need to uncork a bottle to slurp into the pan when cooking them. Soft herring roes have made few dinner party appearances since the demise of the after-dinner savoury.
With a loud slurp Ray Schlegelmilch sucks in a spoonful of brew, twirls it around his tongue and spits into a silver spittoon near his feet.