Slither
Middle English: alteration of the dialect verb slidder, frequentative from the base of slide.
wiktionary
From Middle English slitheren, alteration of slideren(“to slither, creep”), from Old English slidrian(“to slip, slide, slither”), from Proto-West Germanic *slidrōn(“to slide, slither”), from Proto-Indo-European *sleydʰ-(“to slip”), equivalent to slide + -er(frequentative suffix). Cognate with Dutch slidderen(“to slip, wriggle, slither”), German schlittern(“to slither, skid”). More at slide.
etymonline
slither (v.)
early 15c., variant of Middle English slidder "to slip, slide," from Old English slidrian "to slip, slide on a loose slope," a frequentative form of slidan "to slide" (see slide (v.)). For spelling change, compare gather. Meaning "to walk in a sliding manner" is attested from 1848. In reference to reptile motion, attested from 1839. Related: Slithered; slithering.
slither (n.)
"slithering movement," 1861, from slither (v.).