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Bokep
- verbskip (verb) · skips (third person present) · skipped (past tense) · skipped (past participle) · skipping (present participle)
- move along lightly, stepping from one foot to the other with a hop or bounce:"she began to skip down the path"Opposite:
- jump over a rope that is held at both ends by oneself or two other people and turned repeatedly over the head and under the feet, as a game or for exercise.
- NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISHjump over (a rope) as a game or for exercise:"the girls had been skipping rope"
- jump lightly over:"the children used to skip the puddles"
- omit (part of a book that one is reading, or a stage in a sequence that one is following):"the video manual allows the viewer to skip sections he's not interested in" · "she disliked him so much that she skipped over any articles that mentioned him"Opposite:
- fail to attend or deal with as appropriate; miss:"I wanted to skip my English lesson to visit my mother" · "try not to skip breakfast"Similar:fail to attendplay truant fromabsent oneself fromtake French leave fromskive offplay hooky fromplay the wag fromOpposite:
- move quickly and in an unmethodical way from one point or subject to another:"Marian skipped halfheartedly through the book"Similar:glance athave a quick look atleaf throughrun one's eye overOpposite:pore over
- informaldepart quickly and secretly from:"she skipped her home amid rumors of a romance"
- informalrun away; disappear:"I'm not giving them a chance to skip off again"
- informal(skip it)abandon an undertaking, conversation, or activity:"after several wrong turns in our journey, we almost decided to skip it"
- throw (a stone) so that it ricochets off the surface of water.
nounskip (noun) · skips (plural noun)- a light, bouncing step; a skipping movement:"he moved with a strange, dancing skip"
- computingan act of passing over part of a sequence of data or instructions.
- NORTH AMERICAN ENGLISHinformala person who is missing, especially one who has defaulted on a debt.
OriginMiddle English: probably of Scandinavian origin.nounskip (noun) · skips (plural noun)- the captain or director of a team in lawn bowling or curling.
verbskip (verb) · skips (third person present) · skipped (past tense) · skipped (past participle) · skipping (present participle)- act as skip of (a side):"they lost to another Stranraer team, skipped by Peter Wilson"
Originearly 19th century (originally Scots): abbreviation of skipper. - The word "skip" has several meanings:1234
- To jump lightly over a rope.
- To leave out something that would normally be the next thing you would do.
- To move lightly and quickly, making small jumps.
- To not do something that you usually do or that you should do.
Learn more:✕This summary was generated using AI based on multiple online sources. To view the original source information, use the "Learn more" links.to jump lightly over a rope that is held in both your hands, or by two other people, and turned repeatedly under your legs and over your head : Sports players often train by skipping.dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/skip[transitive, intransitive] to leave out something that would normally be the next thing that you would do, read, etc. skip something You can skip the next chapter if you have covered the topic in class. skip over something I skipped over the last part of the book. skip to something I suggest we skip to the last item on the agenda.www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/ame…to move lightly and quickly, making a small jump after each step: skip down She watched her little granddaughter skip down the sidewalk. skip around The lambs were skipping around in the field.dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/skipskip From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Other games skip1 /skɪp/ ●●○ verb (skipped, skipping) 1 not do something [ transitive] informal to not do something that you usually do or that you should do SYN miss She skipped lunch in order to go shopping.www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/skip Skip Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
SKIP definition in American English - Collins Online Dictionary
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