skidoo
See also: Skidoo
English
Etymology 1
Uncertain. Perhaps related to skedaddle. Attested since the early twentieth century.
Alternative forms
Verb
skidoo (third-person singular simple present skidoos, present participle skidooing, simple past and past participle skidooed)
- (informal, Canada, US, intransitive) to depart, especially to depart quickly
- a nonsense word, often an expression of disrespect
- (obsolete) A light that flashes on and off to make it more eye-catching.
- 1906, Electrical World - Volume 48, page 835:
- More than 1,000 winking or "skidoo" lamps will be hung in the vines and shrubbery on cither side of the Flirtation Path and they will wink and blink from 7 o'clock in the evening until midnight.
- 1925, William Ballantyne Anderson, Physics for Technical Students, page 236:
- Important among the devices which utilize these differences in expansion are the automatic fire alarm, the thermostat and the mechanism for operating the "skidoo" lamp used in signs.
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References
- “skidoo” in Douglas Harper, Online Etymology Dictionary, 2001–2018, retrieved 6 February 2018.
Etymology 2
See Skidoo.
Noun
skidoo (plural skidoos)
- Alternative letter-case form of Skidoo
- 2016, Robert W. Barker, Nuclear Rogue, →ISBN:
- He couldn't have seen Peter's skidoo, but he must have seen Peter climbing up the ridgeline. He must have heard Peter's approach on the skidoo.
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Verb
skidoo (third-person singular simple present skidoos, present participle skidooing, simple past and past participle skidooed)
- (Canada, US) To drive or ride on a snowmobile
- 2014, Cassie Merko, Small Beginnings:
- Even skidooing on the farm in my younger years was not that much fun though I recall one time after a storm, I had gone skidooing and I hit some unexpected snow drifts that sent that skidoo flying into the air one minute and plummeting back down the next.
French
Etymology
Antonomasia from Ski-Doo, a brand of snowmobiles.
Noun
skidoo m (plural skidoos)
- (Canada) a snowmobile
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