Sloppes

SLOP, n [ME sloppe] 2. pl short full breeches worn by men in the 16th century 3. pl articles (as clothing) sold to sailors (Webster)

SLOP 2. pl wide, baggy pants common in the 16th and early 17th centuries, especially as worn by sailors (New Oxford American Dictionary)

SLOP Also sloppe, slopp n 2.a. an outer garment, as a loose jacket, tunic, cassock, mantle, gown, or smock-frock 4.a. pl wide baggy breeches or hose, of the kind commonly worn in the 16th and early 17th centuries; loose trousers, especially those worn by sailors. Now chiefly dial. b. sing in the same sense, or denoting only one leg of the garment. Obs. c. the loose or wide part of a pair of breeches of this kind. Obs. rare. 5.a. pl ready-made clothing and other furnishings supplied to seamen from the ship’s stores; hence, ready-made, cheap, or inferior garments generally b. sing in collective use, or denoting a single garment of this kind 7. attrib and comb b. in combs. relating to seamen’s slops, or to cheap ready-made garments, as slop-boat, -book, -chest, -clothes, -clothing, etc. c. slop-chit Naut, a note offered at a ship’s stores in exchange for clothing (Oxford English Dictionary)

(See also Clothing and Accessories)