to slick up

Dictionary of American Words And Phrases by John Russell Bartlett.

To dress up; to make fine.


Mrs. Flyer was slicked up for the occasion, in the snuff-colored silk she was married in.--Mrs. Clavers, A New Home, p. 211.

The house was all slicked up as neat as a pin, and the things in room all sot to rights.--Maj. Downing, May-day, p. 43.

The caps most in vogue then were made of dark, coarse, knotted twine, like a cabbage-net, worn, as the wives said, to save slicking up, and to hide dirt.--Carlton, The New Purchase, Vol. I. p. 72.

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