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单词 skip
释义

skip


skip 1

S0453800 (skĭp)v. skipped, skip·ping, skips v.intr.1. a. To move by hopping on one foot and then the other.b. To leap lightly about.2. To bounce over or be deflected from a surface; skim or ricochet: threw the stone so it skipped over the water.3. To pass from point to point, omitting or disregarding what intervenes: skipped through the list hurriedly; skipping over the dull passages in the novel.4. To be promoted in school beyond the next regular class or grade.5. Informal To leave hastily; abscond: skipped out of town.6. To misfire. Used of an engine.v.tr.1. To leap or jump lightly over: skip rope.2. a. To pass over without mentioning; omit: skipped the minor details of the story.b. To miss or omit as one in a series: My heart skipped a beat.3. To cause to bounce lightly over a surface; skim.4. To be promoted beyond (the next grade or level).5. Informal To leave hastily: The fugitive skipped town.6. Informal To fail to attend: We skipped science class again.n.1. A leaping or jumping movement, especially a gait in which hops and steps alternate.2. An act of passing over something; an omission.3. A control mechanism on an audio or video player that interrupts the playing of a recording and advances or reverses to the beginning of the nearest chapter, track, or other division.
[Middle English skippen, perhaps of Scandinavian origin.]
skip′pa·ble adj.

skip 2

S0453800 (skĭp)n. Chiefly British A container for receiving, transporting, and dumping waste materials.
[Variant of skep (in its earlier meaning, basket).]

skip

(skɪp) vb, skips, skipping or skipped1. (when: intr, often foll by over, along, into, etc) to spring or move lightly, esp to move by hopping from one foot to the other2. (Games, other than specified) (intr) to jump over a skipping-rope3. to cause (a stone, etc) to bounce or skim over a surface or (of a stone) to move in this way4. to omit (intervening matter), as in passing from one part or subject to another: he skipped a chapter of the book. 5. informal (foll by: through) to read or deal with quickly or superficially: he skipped through the accounts before dinner. 6. (tr) informal to miss deliberately: to skip school. 7. (tr) informal chiefly US and Canadian to leave (a place) in haste or secrecy: to skip town. n8. a skipping movement or gait9. the act of passing over or omitting10. (Music, other) music US and Canadian another word for leap1011. skip it! informal it doesn't matter![C13: probably of Scandinavian origin; related to Old Norse skopa to take a run, obsolete Swedish skuppa to skip]

skip

(skɪp) n, vb, skips, skipping or skippedinformal short for skipper1n1. (Curling) the captain of a curling or bowls team2. (Bowls & Bowling) the captain of a curling or bowls team

skip

(skɪp) n1. (Building) a large open container for transporting building materials, etc2. (Mining & Quarrying) a cage used as a lift in mines, etc[C19: variant of skep]

skip

(skɪp) n (Education) a college servant, esp of Trinity College, Dublin[C17: probably shortened from archaic skip-kennel a footman or lackey (from skip1 + kennel2)]

skip1

(skɪp)

v. skipped, skip•ping,
n. v.i. 1. to move in a light, springy manner by bounding forward with alternate hops on each foot. 2. to pass from one point, thing, etc., to another, disregarding or omitting what intervenes. 3. to go away hastily and secretly; flee without notice. 4. to be advanced two or more classes or grades at once. 5. to ricochet or bounce along a surface: The stone skipped over the lake. v.t. 6. to jump lightly over: to skip a fence. 7. to pass over without reading, noting, acting on, etc.: I skipped the long descriptions in the book. 8. to miss or omit (one of a repeated series of rhythmic actions): My heart skipped a beat. 9. to be absent from; avoid attendance at: to skip a party. 10. a. to advance (a person) by two or more classes or grades at once. b. to be advanced beyond (a grade or class) in school. 11. to send (a missile) ricocheting along a surface. 12. to leave hastily and secretly; flee from (a place): They skipped town. n. 13. a skipping movement; a light jump or bounce. 14. a gait marked by such jumps. 15. a passing from one point or thing to another, with disregard of what intervenes. 16. an instance of skipping or a thing skipped. 17. a melodic interval greater than a second. [1250–1300; (v.) Middle English skippen, perhaps < Old Norse skopa to run (compare Icelandic skoppa to skip)] skip′pa•ble, adj. skip′ping•ly, adv.

skip2

(skɪp)

n., v. skipped, skip•ping. n. 1. the captain of a curling or bowling team. 2. skipper 1 . v.t. 3. to serve as skip of (a curling or bowling team). 4. skipper 1. [1820–30; short for skipper1]

Skep, Skip

 a quantity of grain, 1100; of malt or charcoal (usually twelve bushels).Examples: skep of bread, 1470; of chaff, 1846; of charcoal, 1353; of corn, 1380; of grain, c. 1100; of malt; of sand, 1669; of vegetables, 1824.

skip


Past participle: skipped
Gerund: skipping
Imperative
skip
skip
Present
I skip
you skip
he/she/it skips
we skip
you skip
they skip
Preterite
I skipped
you skipped
he/she/it skipped
we skipped
you skipped
they skipped
Present Continuous
I am skipping
you are skipping
he/she/it is skipping
we are skipping
you are skipping
they are skipping
Present Perfect
I have skipped
you have skipped
he/she/it has skipped
we have skipped
you have skipped
they have skipped
Past Continuous
I was skipping
you were skipping
he/she/it was skipping
we were skipping
you were skipping
they were skipping
Past Perfect
I had skipped
you had skipped
he/she/it had skipped
we had skipped
you had skipped
they had skipped
Future
I will skip
you will skip
he/she/it will skip
we will skip
you will skip
they will skip
Future Perfect
I will have skipped
you will have skipped
he/she/it will have skipped
we will have skipped
you will have skipped
they will have skipped
Future Continuous
I will be skipping
you will be skipping
he/she/it will be skipping
we will be skipping
you will be skipping
they will be skipping
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been skipping
you have been skipping
he/she/it has been skipping
we have been skipping
you have been skipping
they have been skipping
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been skipping
you will have been skipping
he/she/it will have been skipping
we will have been skipping
you will have been skipping
they will have been skipping
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been skipping
you had been skipping
he/she/it had been skipping
we had been skipping
you had been skipping
they had been skipping
Conditional
I would skip
you would skip
he/she/it would skip
we would skip
you would skip
they would skip
Past Conditional
I would have skipped
you would have skipped
he/she/it would have skipped
we would have skipped
you would have skipped
they would have skipped
Thesaurus
Noun1.skip - a gait in which steps and hops alternateskip - a gait in which steps and hops alternategait - a person's manner of walking
2.skip - a mistake resulting from neglectskip - a mistake resulting from neglect omissionfailure - an unexpected omission; "he resented my failure to return his call"; "the mechanic's failure to check the brakes"error, fault, mistake - a wrong action attributable to bad judgment or ignorance or inattention; "he made a bad mistake"; "she was quick to point out my errors"; "I could understand his English in spite of his grammatical faults"
Verb1.skip - bypass; "He skipped a row in the text and so the sentence was incomprehensible"pass over, skip over, jumpneglect, omit, leave out, pretermit, overleap, overlook, miss, drop - leave undone or leave out; "How could I miss that typo?"; "The workers on the conveyor belt miss one out of ten"
2.skip - intentionally fail to attend; "cut class"cutmiss - fail to attend an event or activity; "I missed the concert"; "He missed school for a week"bunk off, play hooky - play truant from work or school; "The boy often plays hooky"
3.skip - jump lightlyhop, hop-skipbound, jump, leap, spring - move forward by leaps and bounds; "The horse bounded across the meadow"; "The child leapt across the puddle"; "Can you jump over the fence?"pass over, skip, skip over, jump - bypass; "He skipped a row in the text and so the sentence was incomprehensible"
4.skip - leave suddenlyskip - leave suddenly; "She persuaded him to decamp"; "skip town"vamoose, decampgo forth, leave, go away - go away from a place; "At what time does your train leave?"; "She didn't leave until midnight"; "The ship leaves at midnight"colloquialism - a colloquial expression; characteristic of spoken or written communication that seeks to imitate informal speech
5.skip - bound off one point after anotherbound offbounce, rebound, ricochet, take a hop, resile, spring, recoil, bound, reverberate - spring back; spring away from an impact; "The rubber ball bounced"; "These particles do not resile but they unite after they collide"
6.skip - cause to skip over a surface; "Skip a stone across the pond"skitter, skimthrow - propel through the air; "throw a frisbee"

skip

verb1. hop, dance, bob, trip, bounce, caper, prance, cavort, frisk, gambol She was skipping along the pavement.2. miss out, omit, leave out, overlook, pass over, eschew, forego, skim over, give (something) a miss It is important not to skip meals.3. (Informal) miss, cut (informal), bunk off (slang), play truant from, wag (dialect), skive off, play hookey from (U.S. informal), dog it or dog off (dialect) Her daughter started skipping school.

skip

verb1. To bound lightly:hop, skitter, spring, trip.2. To strike a surface at such an angle as to be deflected:carom, dap, glance, graze, ricochet, skim.3. To cease consideration or treatment of:dismiss, drop, give over, give up.Idioms: have done with, wash one's hands of.4. Informal. To break loose and leave suddenly, as from confinement or from a difficult or threatening situation.Also used with out:abscond, break out, decamp, escape, flee, fly, get away, run away.Slang: lam.Regional: absquatulate.Idioms: blow the coop, cut and run, give someone the slip, make a getaway, take flight, take it on the lam.5. Informal. To fail to attend on purpose:cut, truant.Idioms: go AWOL, play hooky.nounA light bounding movement:hop, spring.
Translations
略过省去跳跳绳跳过

skip

(skip) verbpast tense, past participle skipped1. to go along with a hop on each foot in turn. The little girl skipped up the path.2. to jump over a rope that is being turned under the feet and over the head (as a children's game). 跳繩 跳绳3. to miss out (a meal, part of a book etc). I skipped lunch and went shopping instead; Skip chapter two. 跳過,省掉 略过,省去 noun a hop on one foot in skipping.

skip

略过zhCN, 跳过zhCN

skip


hop, skip, and (a) jump

1. A short distance away from a certain location. My apartment's location is so convenient. It's just a hop, skip, and a jump away from the train station and the grocery store.2. Very similar (to something else). I thought you could handle this project because it's just a hop, skip, and a jump from the one you're working on now.See also: and, jump

skip (out)

Inf. to leave; to run away without doing something, such as paying a bill. The guy skipped when the waitress wasn't looking. Fred skipped out, leaving me with the bill.

skip

verbSee skip out
See:
  • (one's) heart skips a beat
  • a hop, skip, and a jump
  • heart misses a beat, one's
  • heart skips a beat
  • hop, skip, and (a) jump
  • hop, skip, and a jump
  • hop, skip, and jump
  • jump bail
  • not skip a beat
  • skip
  • skip a beat
  • skip bail
  • skip it
  • Skip it!
  • skip off
  • skip out
  • skip out of
  • skip out of (some place)
  • skip out of (something or some place)
  • skip out on
  • skip out on (someone or something)
  • skip out with
  • skip out with (someone or something)
  • skip over (someone or something)
  • skip rope
  • skip through
  • skip through (something)
  • skip town
  • skipping rope
  • three skips of a louse
  • without skipping a beat

skip


skip

1 the captain of a curling or bowls team

skip

2 a college servant, esp of Trinity College, Dublin

Skip

 

a box-shaped device that moves along the rigid guide rails of a hoist; the box unloads automatically. Skips are used for transporting useful minerals or rocks through vertical or inclined mine shafts, for hoisting and loading the charge into blast furnaces, and for similar operations. The principal components of a skip are the body, the frame, and the trailer. Skips are unloaded either through the bottom or by dumping.

skip

[skip] (computer science) In fixed-instruction-length digital computers, to bypass or ignore one or more instructions in an otherwise sequential process. A device on a card punch that causes columns on a punch in fields where no punching is desired to move rapidly past the punching station. Action of a computer printer that moves rapidly over a line so that a blank line appears in the printout. (mechanical engineering) skip hoist

holiday, skip

1. A small area on a painted surface which the brush skipped over, leaving it bare. 2. An area on a built-up roof surface which the mop (used to coat the surface) skipped over, leaving it uncovered by bitumen.

skip

1. An area in planed or sanded lumber or panels which was missed by the machine during the surfacing operation; also called planing skip, sanding skip.2. An uncoated area in a finished painted surface; also called a holiday.
LegalSeeHolidayFinancialSeeholiday

SKIP


AcronymDefinition
SKIPSimple Key Management for Internet Protocols
SKIPStudents for Kids International Projects (UK)
SKIPSafe Kids Identification Program
SKIPSecure Key Interchange Protocol (Sun Microsystems)
SKIPSimple Key Internet Protocol
SKIPSick Kids need Involved People, Inc.
SKIPStudy of Knowledge in Practice (UK)
SKIPStarter Kit Internet Platform
SKIPSubmarine Knowledge Impaired Person (submarine service)

skip


Related to skip: Skype
  • all
  • verb
  • noun

Synonyms for skip

verb hop

Synonyms

  • hop
  • dance
  • bob
  • trip
  • bounce
  • caper
  • prance
  • cavort
  • frisk
  • gambol

verb miss out

Synonyms

  • miss out
  • omit
  • leave out
  • overlook
  • pass over
  • eschew
  • forego
  • skim over
  • give (something) a miss

verb miss

Synonyms

  • miss
  • cut
  • bunk off
  • play truant from
  • wag
  • skive off
  • play hookey from
  • dog it or dog off

Synonyms for skip

verb to bound lightly

Synonyms

  • hop
  • skitter
  • spring
  • trip

verb to strike a surface at such an angle as to be deflected

Synonyms

  • carom
  • dap
  • glance
  • graze
  • ricochet
  • skim

verb to cease consideration or treatment of

Synonyms

  • dismiss
  • drop
  • give over
  • give up

verb to break loose and leave suddenly, as from confinement or from a difficult or threatening situation

Synonyms

  • abscond
  • break out
  • decamp
  • escape
  • flee
  • fly
  • get away
  • run away
  • lam
  • absquatulate

verb to fail to attend on purpose

Synonyms

  • cut
  • truant

noun a light bounding movement

Synonyms

  • hop
  • spring

Synonyms for skip

noun a gait in which steps and hops alternate

Related Words

  • gait

noun a mistake resulting from neglect

Synonyms

  • omission

Related Words

  • failure
  • error
  • fault
  • mistake

verb bypass

Synonyms

  • pass over
  • skip over
  • jump

Related Words

  • neglect
  • omit
  • leave out
  • pretermit
  • overleap
  • overlook
  • miss
  • drop

verb intentionally fail to attend

Synonyms

  • cut

Related Words

  • miss
  • bunk off
  • play hooky

verb jump lightly

Synonyms

  • hop
  • hop-skip

Related Words

  • bound
  • jump
  • leap
  • spring
  • pass over
  • skip
  • skip over

verb leave suddenly

Synonyms

  • vamoose
  • decamp

Related Words

  • go forth
  • leave
  • go away
  • colloquialism

verb bound off one point after another

Synonyms

  • bound off

Related Words

  • bounce
  • rebound
  • ricochet
  • take a hop
  • resile
  • spring
  • recoil
  • bound
  • reverberate

verb cause to skip over a surface

Synonyms

  • skitter
  • skim

Related Words

  • throw
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