| scat | (vi) จากไปอย่างรวดเร็ว, See also: โกยอ้าว, จ้ำอ้าว |
| scat | (vi) ร้องเสียงดังอย่างไร้ความหมายคลอไปกับเครื่องดนตรีชิ้นเดียว (เช่น ร้องเพลงแจ๊ส) |
| scat |
| scat |
| scat | (n) singing jazz; the singer substitutes nonsense syllables for the words of the song and tries to sound like a musical instrument, Syn. scat singing |
| scat | (v) flee; take to one's heels; cut and run, Syn. bunk, take to the woods, head for the hills, hightail it, run away, escape, lam, fly the coop, run, turn tail, scarper, break away, Example: If you see this man, run!; The burglars escaped before the police showed up |
| scathing | (adj) marked by harshly abusive criticism, Syn. vituperative, Example: his scathing remarks about silly lady novelists; her vituperative railing |
| scathingly | (adv) in a scathing and unsparing manner, Syn. unsparingly, Example: she criticized him scathingly |
| scatological | (adj) dealing pruriently with excrement and excretory functions, Example: scatological literature |
| scatology | (n) a preoccupation with obscenity (especially that dealing with excrement or excretory functions) |
| scatology | (n) (medicine) the chemical analysis of excrement (for medical diagnosis or for paleontological purposes) |
| scatophagy | (n) the eating of excrement or other filth |
| scatter | (n) a haphazard distribution in all directions, Syn. spread |
| scatter | (n) the act of scattering, Syn. scattering, strewing |
| Scat | n. A shower of rain. [ Prov. Eng. ] Wright. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Scat | interj. Go away; begone; away; -- chiefly used in driving off a cat. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Scatch | n. [ F. escache. ] A kind of bit for the bridle of a horse; -- called also |
| Scatches | n. pl. [ OF. eschaces, F. échasses, fr. D. schaats a high-heeled shoe, a skate. See Skate, for the foot. ] Stilts. [ Prov. Eng. ] [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Scate | n. See Skate, for the foot. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Scatebrous | a. [ L. scatebra a gushing up of water, from scatere to bubble, gush. ] Abounding with springs. [ Obs. ] [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Scath | n. [ Icel. skaði; akin to Dan. skade, Sw. skada, AS. sceaða, scaða, foe, injurer, OS. skaðo, D. schade, harm, injury, OHG. scade, G. schade, schaden; cf. Gr. But she was somedeal deaf, and that was skathe. Chaucer. [ 1913 Webster ] Great mercy, sure, for to enlarge a thrall, Wherein Rome hath done you any scath, |
| Scath | As when heaven's fire Strokes of calamity that scathe and scorch the soul. W. Irving. [ 1913 Webster ] Variants: Scathe |
| Scathful | a. Harmful; doing damage; pernicious. Shak. [ 1913 Webster ] -- |
| Scathless | a. Unharmed. R. L. Stevenson. [ 1913 Webster ] He, too, . . . is to be dismissed scathless. Sir W. Scott. [ 1913 Webster ] |