Noun
I got a sliver of wood stuck in my finger. Verb
carefully slivered the rattan stems into strips for basketry
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Noun
At the time, only a sliver of US car sales were imports and few Americans had even heard of Toyota or Honda.—Chris Isidore, CNN Money, 20 Apr. 2025 Far from busier beach bars that draw maritime visitors, Island Paradise Restaurant offers classic Caribbean fare bursting with flavor in a quaint local home with a sliver of an ocean view.—Carley Rojas Avila, Travel + Leisure, 19 Apr. 2025
Verb
This all comes despite a setback in October with an E. coli outbreak linked to slivered onions on its Quarter Pounders.—Francisco Velasquez, Quartz, 17 Dec. 2024 After temporarily pulling the menu item from roughly a fifth of its U.S. restaurants, the company said Sunday that the burger will return to affected locations, sans slivered onions.—Amelia Lucas, CNBC, 29 Oct. 2024 See All Example Sentences for sliver
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English slivere, from sliven to slice off, from Old English -slīfan; akin to Old English -slǣfan to cut
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