Verb
To leave quietly, and unnoticed.
To go out for a brief moment; pop out
To be said or revealed by accident.
I was talking to Jim, about Paul and Ethel, when it just slipped out about their possible divorce. I'm sorry.
A male employee let the C-word slip out in the office. Source: Internet
I can’t say I’ve ever had a handheld console slip out of my hands, but the RG350P includes extra rubber grips on the back making it easier to hold securely. Source: Internet
Amy normally tries to slip out as inconspicuously as she can when the shorter Latina arrives, but for a trained spy, she tends to just nervously blurt out some random excuse that doesn’t make sense half the time and then bolt the other direction. Source: Internet
Amid its bright aesthetic lies an anxious series about running in place and running out of time, all while desperately trying to hold onto good things before they slip out of grasp. Source: Internet
James Thurber described White as being a quiet man, disliking publicity, who during his time at The New Yorker would slip out of his office via the fire escape to a nearby branch of Schrafft's to avoid visitors whom he didn't know. Source: Internet
And unlike implants, Voluma will never slip out of place, because the gel incorporates itself into the skin's layers. Source: Internet