skrrt
English
Alternative forms
- skrr
- skurt, scurt
Etymology
Onomatopoeic. Lexicalized from Riverdale Shawty’s feature in the original mixtape version of Waka Flocka Flame’s 2009 song O Let's Do It uttering Even got the spots (Scurt! Scurt!) off the block. Then in late 2013 Chief Keef picked up the interjection, alleged to have circulated sporadically in Afro-American circles since the 1990s, for his piece Chiefin Keef, his line Pull off in that foreign, skrr skrr skrr, she thought she seen a beast, and many other lines in his further career, to be imitated by other rappers of New York and soon the whole world, which embraced it as a fashion symbol printed on apparel.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): (interjection) [skɹ̩ʔ˥]
Interjection
skrrt (slang, African-American Vernacular, MLE, MTE)
- The sound of a tire screeching
- The sound of one quickly turning away from someone/something
Verb
skrrt (third-person singular simple present skrrts, present participle skrrting, simple past and past participle skrrted) (slang, African-American Vernacular, MLE)
- To speed away to another place by means of a vehicle with tires, or in simulation of it.