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skedaddle. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
skedaddle, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
skedaddle in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
skedaddle you have here. The definition of the word
skedaddle will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
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English
Etymology
First use appears c. 1861, in the New York Tribune. The word appeared and gained prominence in Civil War military contexts around 1861, and rapidly passing into more general use. Possibly an alteration of British dialect scaddle (“to run off in a fright”), from the adjective scaddle (“wild, timid, skittish”), from Middle English scathel, skadylle (“harmful, fierce, wild”), perhaps of North Germanic/Scandinavian origin, from Old Norse *sköþull; or from Old English *scaþol, *sceaþol (see scathel); akin to Old Norse skaði (“harm”). Possibly related to the Ancient Greek σκέδασις (skédasis, “scattering”), σκεδασμός (skedasmós, “dispersion”). Possibly related to scud or scat.
Pronunciation
Verb
skedaddle (third-person singular simple present skedaddles, present participle skedaddling, simple past and past participle skedaddled)
- (informal, intransitive, US) To move or run away quickly.
1895 October, Stephen Crane, chapter II, in The Red Badge of Courage: An Episode of the American Civil War, New York, N.Y.: D Appleton and Company, →OCLC, page 29:"Well," continued the youth, "lots of good-a-'nough men have thought they was going to do great things before the fight, but when the time come they skedaddled."
1963, J P Donleavy, A Singular Man, published 1963 (USA), page 204:Looked up at your office and all of it empty and I nearly cried. Cigar guy, out viewing his big time display window comes across the street. Wants to know if he can help. Told him to mind his own business. You know what he said, sister if you got any connection with that guy, they caught up with him, so you better beat it. I said sic him Goliath. Did that guy skidaddle.
1976 September, Saul Bellow, Humboldt’s Gift, New York, N.Y.: Avon Books, →ISBN, page 122:Then filled with inspiration he drove in his Buick, the busted muffler blasting in the country lanes and the great long car skedaddling dangerously on the curves. Lucky for the woodchucks they were already hibernating.
2018, Oliver Bullough, chapter 2, in Moneyland, →ISBN, page 41:In the early 1960s, there were plenty of people still alive who had looted Europe in the Second World War, parked proceeds in Switzerland, and skedaddled to Argentina.
- (transitive, regional) To spill; to scatter.
Synonyms
- (move or run away quickly): flee, vamoose, skitter, scat, skidoo, take off, make tracks, beat feet, kick rocks, get lost, hightail; see also Thesaurus:move quickly, Thesaurus:rush or Thesaurus:flee
Translations
move or run away quickly
- Bulgarian: офейквам (bg) (ofejkvam), измъквам се (izmǎkvam se)
- Dutch: vluchten (nl), wegstuiven (nl), het op een lopen zetten
- Finnish: juosta karkuun
- French: déguerpir (fr)
- German: abhauen (de), türmen (de)
- Hungarian: megfutamodik (hu), elszalad (hu), elinal (hu), meglép (hu)
- Interlingua: sortir
- Italian: scappare (it)
- Macedonian: бе́га (béga)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: stikke av (no), pigge av, stikke (no)
- Polish: zwiewać, zwiać (pl)
- Portuguese: dar no pé (pt)
- Russian: дра́пать (ru) impf (drápatʹ), улепётывать (ru) impf (ulepjótyvatʹ), удира́ть (ru) impf (udirátʹ), удра́ть (ru) pf (udrátʹ), сма́тываться (ru) impf (smátyvatʹsja), смота́ться (ru) pf (smotátʹsja)
- Serbo-Croatian: (reflexive (+ accusative)) razbježati (sh)
- Spanish: largarse (es), irse (es), pirarse (es), pirárselas (es)
- Swedish: sticka (sv), pysa (sv), dra (sv), kila (sv), rusa (sv), springa (sv)
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Noun
skedaddle (plural skedaddles)
- (informal) The act of running away; a scurrying off.
Translations
See also
References
- 1897, Hunter, Robert, and Charles Morris, editors, Universal Dictionary of the English Language, v4, p4291: "Etym. doubtful; perhaps allied to scud. To betake one's self hurriedly to flight; to run away as in a panic; to fly in terror. (A word of American origin.)"
- Michael Quinion (February 7, 2004) “Skedaddle”, in World Wide Words.