It usually means to use, betray, or badly mistreat someone, often in a sneaky or manipulative way.

What Does It Mean to Slime Someone Out?

In modern slang (especially online and in hip‑hop contexts), “slime someone out” generally involves doing something grimy to them, not something positive.

Core meanings

People use “slime someone out” in a few closely related ways:

  • Betray them or go behind their back (snaking someone, setting them up, getting “get back” on them).
  • Use or manipulate them for your own benefit, then discard them (for status, favors, money, or attention).
  • In dating/sexual contexts, use someone mainly for sex or their “bedroom skills” with no real intention of commitment, then ghost or drop them.

In some darker uses (like certain online or street‑culture contexts), it can even be tied to violent revenge or robbing someone after you feel they’ve acted suspicious or disloyal.

A simple way to read it: if you “slime someone out,” you’re doing them dirty on purpose.

Where you’ll see it used

You’ll see “slime you out” or “slimed out” in:

  • TikTok and social media jokes about “sliming out” a friend who crossed a line, often in a playful or exaggerated way.
  • Lyrics and fan discussions around Drake & SZA’s song “Slime You Out,” where it leans more into manipulative relationship and sexual behavior.
  • Urban Dictionary and forum posts, which frame it as getting revenge, using someone who wronged you, or cutting them off in a harsh way.

Because it’s slang, exact meaning depends on context and who’s saying it, but it almost never means something kind or respectful.

Quick nuance check

If you hear:

  • “I’ll slime you out” – they’re saying they’ll do you dirty (emotionally, socially, or sometimes physically).
  • “He slimed me out” – they feel used, betrayed, or played.

Context (joking with friends vs. serious beef or relationship drama) tells you how extreme it is in that moment. TL;DR: “Slime someone out” means treating them in a grimy way—using, betraying, or playing them, often in relationships or street/online drama, and it’s not a compliment.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.