From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishslobslob1 /slɒb $ slɑːb/ noun [countable] informal UNTIDYsomeone who is lazy and untidy a lazy slob
Examples from the Corpus
slob• Then Scott started on the children, calling the oldest girl a slob.• If you keep dressing like a slob, no one's ever going to ask you for a date.• You can look like a slob for free, I figure.• I choose to believe he was merely a slob rather than inefficient enough to walk around with bloodstains from his last victim.• Jo's such a slob - how can you live like that?• And the big slob didn't even realize how objectionable he was.• Why are you going out with that fat slob?• His no-good slob of a kid was talking of having forty thousand dollars.• Larry Flynt presents the infamous pornographer as a likable slob who faced down the big guys and won.• Ludwig Holzer claims that slobs work harder because they feel they must prove something.slobslob2 verb (slobbed, slobbing) → slob around/out→ See Verb tableOrigin slob (1700-1800) Irish Gaelic slab “mud”