skeeve
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -iːv
Audio (AU) (file) Audio (Southern England) (file)
Verb
skeeve (third-person singular simple present skeeves, present participle skeeving, simple past and past participle skeeved)
- (slang, transitive, often with out) To disgust or disturb.
- 1964, Lou Cameron, The Block Busters, page 186:
- I asked her, one time, if it didn't maybe skeeve her to work for a crud like Duke.
- (slang, transitive) To be disgusted or disturbed by.
- 1993, Pete Dexter, Brotherly Love, page 16:
- His mother is repulsed by his uncle; he has heard her whisper it in the kitchen, "I skeeves him, Charley." She is Italian.
- 1997, Don DeLillo, Underworld, Scribner, page 727:
- You could put that needle in your arm? Man, I skeeve that like death.
- 2009 May 28, Penelope Green, “Jersey Girls, Nesting”, in New York Times:
- Indeed, when baby-voiced Teresa describes the bone-crunching finishes in her new home, a 12,000-square-foot French chateau simulacrum that’s “all granite, marble and onyx,” and avers her commitment to the brand-spanking new (“I just skeeve looking at other people’s houses,” she says.
- (slang, intransitive) To be or become disgusted.
- 1993, James McCourt, Time Remaining, →ISBN, page 67:
- I remember Phil telling O'Maurigan after the Schuyler reading he's afraid I won't ever write a book— not because I'm lazy, or don't have the self-esteem, but because I skeeve on stealing.
Derived terms
Noun
skeeve (plural skeeves)
- (slang) A disgusting or loathed person.
- 1996, Robert DiChiara, Alibis, page 319:
- He looked so fucking competent, for a skeeve with greasy blond hair pulled into a ponytail, a beaded headband, and callused bare feet.
Further reading
- Jonathon Green (2024) “skeeve n.”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang
Anagrams
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