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skit

[ UK /skˈɪt/ ]
[ US /ˈskɪt/ ]
NOUN
  1. a short theatrical episode

How To Use skit In A Sentence

  • A couple of phone calls, arranged by a deep-sea diver I came to know while working on a story on the Miskito Coast of Nicaragua, led me to an alternately boastful and paranoidly surreptitious man named Steve. The Lampshade
  • But as I was mulling this a little later, I was suddenly struck by one of those things that was probably already obvious to everyone else: There are a handful of strange inflection points where rock nerd culture and mass culture are in eerie synchrony for a few moments before skittering off in their respective ways for a bit — and one of them was my early teens. The (Rock) Stars Are Aligned
  • Retrieve the lure rapidly in skips and skitters over the tops of lily pads, along log edges, and above the weeds. Bait and Switch
  • In these festivals the working people would hold skits in which they would uncrown the king.
  • Guess it would have been OK if the discombobulated old drunk had skittled some kid on a zebra crossing.
  • Just then the door opened and in stepped a wiry bearded man, who was mumbling to himself and skittering around cattishly.
  • With a flick of invisible fingers it sent a tiny, blood-red stone skittering across the table to Tamani.
  • And then there are the funny ones such as ning nong, doofus, blatherskite. Etymology – the origins of words « Write Anything
  • Is that why she was so skittish and nervous around me?
  • This is especially useful for skittish horses and pregnant mares.
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