skip 1 (sk ĭp)
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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.]
skippa·ble adj. |