sling-the stem of sling v.1 used in combs., as † sling-dart, a military engine for throwing darts; sling-fruit, a fruit which forcibly ejects the seeds when ripe; sling-net, a casting-net; sling-snakeZool., a name given to a genus of snakes belonging to the Colubrine group of the Colubridæ; sling-spear, a spear hurled with a throwing-stick; sling-trot, a loose swinging trot or pace.1600Holland Livy xlii. lxv. 1154 Most hurt they had by certaine weapons called Cestrosphendonæ (*sling darts). A new kind of dart this was and lately devised.a1899Oliver tr.Kerner's N.H. Plants II. 833 The fruits of Dorycnium and Acanthus may be taken as types of a large group designated by the name of *Sling-fruits.1589Fleming Virg. Georg. i. 6 Now one with *slingnet beats vpon the riuer brode and large, Reaching vnto the very depth.1866Mrs. Gaskell Wives & Dau. i. x. 112 He had been out dredging in ponds and ditches, and has his wet sling-net, with its imprisoned treasures..over his shoulder.1896Lydekker Roy.Nat.Hist. V. 205 We mention as a second genus of this group the *sling-snakes, of which there are about twenty known species.1888Andrews Temple Mystic 79 None further the *sling-spear threw.1853J. Palliser Solitary Rambles & Adventures Hunter in Prairies vi. 144, I saw my stag begin to fall in the rear of the band, and his pace slacken to a *sling trot.1860W. H. Russell Diary in India I. xvi. 247 Stewart and I at once started off at a sling trot.1866Mrs. Gaskell Wives & Dau. xxix, The long sling-trot, so well known to the country people as the doctor's pace.