skeet
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Is skeet a Scrabble word?
Word Games
- Scrabble US/Canada (OTCWL) Yes
- Scrabble UK (SOWPODS) Yes
- Wordle Yes
- Words With Friends Yes
What is the meaning of skeet?
Definition
noun (English)
1. (uncountable) A form of trapshooting using clay targets to simulate birds in flight.Examples: "THE ARTICLE on the sport of Skeet that appeared in the June issue of WILD LIFE described the layout of the Skeet field, installation of the traps, and the rules and regulations for Skeet shooting."; "The longer I shoot skeet the more convinced I am that it is the greatest game ever devised for the users of shotguns. Skeet has brought home to shooters the need of properly fitting guns and the benefit of straighter stocks"; "To Mrs. Gertrude Hurlbutt, Montana rancher’s wife, went a $100 prize in 1926 from National Sportsman and Hunting and Fishing magazines for christening their newly sponsored shotgun sport “skeet” – Scandinavian derivation, meaning “to shoot.”"uncountable
2. (countable, poker) A hand consisting of a 9, a 5, a 2, and two other cards lower than 9.countable
3. (uncountable, slang, African-American Vernacular) The ejaculation of semen.slanguncountable
4. (countable, Newfoundland, Labrador, slang) A young working-class person who may be loud, disruptive and poorly educated.Examples: "A small part at least of the language associated with younger speakers originates in local words that appear to have undergone local meaning change. A good example is skeet. This term may be related to skite which in neighbouring Prince Edward Island can mean a 'young scoundrel' (Pratt 1988), or to the American terms skeester/skeeter, definied by the Dictionary of American Regional English (Cassidy and Hall 1985) as 'rascal, rogue'. If older NLE speakers know this word at all, they would probably use it in this sense. Among younger speakers, however, it has much the same meaning as such British slang terms as chav, charver or scally, or even the North American white trash."Newfoundlandcountableslang
verb (English)
1. (ambitransitive, of fluids) To shoot or spray.Examples: "‘Aoow! You skeeted the water right in my ear. It’s busted my eardrum. I can’t even hear.’ ‘Gimme here. Let me skeet some.’"; "When her left hook connected with his nose, blood skeeted out and stained her top."ambitransitive
2. (African-American Vernacular, slang) To ejaculate.Examples: "To the window (To the window). To the wall (To the wall). Till the sweat drop down my balls (My balls). Till all these bitches crawl (Crawl). Till all skeet skeet motherfucker (Motherfucker)."; ""Good, then," I said, my joint about to skeet like a water pistol. I was surprised too. I was known for having supreme dick control, and I could usually last a lot longer than this."; "I just don’t understand how women get pregnant nowadays, especially while they have no intention on making a baby, […] yet and still letting some dude, boyfriend, or friend with benefits slide in for a 7-10 split, and not exactly advising him to pull out before he accidentally skeets ."slang
noun (English)
1. (obsolete) A long-handled shovel or scoop.Examples: "My werk & labour schal be to tellyn what is þis wose of þe vij. dedly synnes, & how ʒe schul caste out þis wose, ffirst wyth with a skeet of contricyoun, and after wyth a skauell of confession, and þanne schouelyn out clene þe crummys, wyth þe schouele of satisfaccyoun."obsolete
2. (nautical) A scoop with a long handle, used to wash the sides of a vessel and formerly to wet the sails or deck.Examples: "The best method for wetting the after sails is with a garden syringe or small engine[…] For the head sails a skeet made of tough ash, having a good long handle ; the head or skeeting part curves scimitar fashion, to be about three and a half feet in length, and scooped out an inch and a half in width by two and a half inches in depth"
verb (English)
1. (nautical, dated) To wet the sails or deck of a vessel.Examples: "It is a customary rule in all sailing matches that the sails of competing vessels should not be skeeted (i.e. wetted), except when the vessel is on a wind"dated
noun (English)
1. (Isle of Man) news or gossipuncountable
verb (English)
1. (Isle of Man) to spy through the front windows of somebody else's house
Definition source: Wiktionary