a thick semiliquid substance (as food) that is unattractive
the restaurant served glop that brought back unpleasant memories of my high school cafeteria
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Recent Examples of glopHis breakthrough short movie-sculpture-painting, Men Getting Sick (1960), involved casting his own head in plaster, and applying more of the glop to the screen.—Tessa Solomon, ARTnews.com, 3 Sep. 2019 After an hour at 19,000 g’s, cell wall debris packs down as leaden glop at the bottom of a tube.—Will Hively, Discover Magazine, 11 Nov. 2019 But mostly, Cronenberg jacks up his own career-long obsessions with glop and grunge and decay to fever pitch.—Los Angeles Times, 27 June 2023 The way language glops out of everyone’s mouth like soft-serve ice cream.—Sam Anderson, New York Times, 3 June 2023 What passed for salad—diced potatoes tossed with Russian dressing, or a half-head of doubtful-looking iceberg drenched in an indeterminate glop—wasn’t very appealing alongside traditional Chinese fare.—James T. Areddy, WSJ, 16 Aug. 2021 Later in the movie, there’s an even less convincing glop of social commentary.—Kyle Smith, National Review, 14 Oct. 2021 Well, there’s nothing like a little gratuitous sincerity after a great deal of inexplicable green glop.—Dennis Harvey, Variety, 1 Oct. 2021 Every single table seemed to have ordered the rigatoni, which was hardly the pink glop of your average red-sauce place—these noodles were dense, curvaceous, bathed in cream laced with tomato and just a whisper of heat.—Helen Rosner, The New Yorker, 19 May 2021
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