outskip

verb

Etymology

From out- + skip.

  1. derived from *ksewbʰ-
  2. derived from *skupjaną
  3. derived from skippen
  4. prefixed as outskip — “out + skip

Definitions

  1. To avoid by flight or fleeing

    To avoid by flight or fleeing; escape.

    • Thou lost thyself, child Drusus, when thou thoughtst Thou couldst outskip my vengeance; or outstand The power I had to crush thee into air.
    • The right novice of pregnant and aspiring conceit will not outskip any precious gem of invention, or any beautiful flower of elocution that may richly adorn or gallantly bedeck the trim garland of his budding style.
    • He pretends to be surprised at nothing, and to possess in perfection—poor, pitiable old fop—the art nil admirari; but repeatedly, I know, I have clear outskipped his fancy.
  2. To surpass in skipping

    To surpass in skipping; surpass in skipping stones.

    • We had stopped throwing stones in view of anyone except ourselves years ago, after we saw the looks on the adults' faces when we outskipped them.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for outskip. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA