slut n
1 A tin kettle, often one with a large flat
bottom and tapering to the top, used to boil water on an open fire; cp PlPER, SMUT.
1924 ENGLAND 11 Some were drawing water at an icicled faucet near
the cropping shed, bringing 'sluts' (kettles) aboard, and brewing tea. 1937 DEVINE 46 ~ A
large tin teakettle. P 102-60 Everybody would line up 3 times a day for salt meat,
potatoes and figgy duff or saltfish and brewis and a slut full of boiled tea, no milk but
good old Barbados molasses, no sugar. P 54-67 A hotwater kettle, of the familiar type
locally made by tinsmiths and much used on outdoor picnics, hunting trips etc, is called
a slutespecially the very large sort, holding about 4 gallons and made of sheet
copper, used on board the old sealing steamers, being always kept full of boiling water
on the galley stove, whence sealers would take small kettlesful to take to their bunks
and brew tea with. 1973 MOWAT 69 Twice a week ... we got duff, made out of condemned
flour put into bags and boiled in a sluta big kettlewith a bit of salt pork.
2 Attrib slut kettle: see sense 1 above.
T 181-65 An 'we had a large kettle [that was shaped] up like that.
They used to call 'em the slut kettle.
slut tea: strong tea
brewed in the kettle in which the water is boiled.
P 145-74 There
was nothing on the table but bread, molasses and slut tea.
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