slimebag

slimebag

An offensive, detestable, repellent person, especially one who does unscrupulous or immoral things. My last boss was a total slimebag, making all sorts of shady deals to skim a bit of extra profit for herself. That slime bag defrauded his clients for millions of dollars. They ought to lock him up and throw away the key.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

slime bag

and slime bucket and slimebag and slimeball
n. a despicable person, usually a male. (see also slime.) Gee, a slime bag like that in the same room with me! Yuck!
See also: bag, slime

slimebag

verb
See slime bag
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • slime bag
  • slimeball
  • slime bucket
  • sludge ball
  • sludgeball
  • sleazo
  • sleazoid
  • sleazeball
  • sleazebag
  • sleez
References in periodicals archive
All good clean fun then for the pair variously described as "zany", "slapstick", "madcap" and - at least by Sally Williams, the recipient of Barry's e-mails, "a slimebag and a sleaze ball who could have wrecked my life".
Ifans gives good slimebag. And while Ulliel will no doubt peeve those looking for a junior Hopkins act-alike, he does bring intelligence and poise to a role that strays too little from one menacing, supercilious note.
They're wondering - not unreasonably - how you'd cope if you encountered not one slimebag but a gang of them, while on your own.
- Gary Windass, fresh out of prison and raring to avenge himself on the slimebag who put him behind bars?
From his performance as a German megalomaniac terrorist in Die Hard to his memorable role as the dastardly Sheriff of Nottingham in Robin Hood: Prince Of Thieves, Alan Rickman has perfected the art of the evil slimebag.
In other words a randy old slimebag in need of dental surgery, with a face like a robber's dog and a love of Chelsea.
Dermot Collins, 23, from Rathmines, Dublin, said: "He should stick to writing about football, although he's a bit of a slimebag at that too."