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Skeat

American  
[skeet] / skit /

noun

  1. Walter William, 1835–1912, English philologist and lexicographer.


Example Sentences

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Coined by philologist Walter William Skeat in 1886, ghost words are often the result of misreadings and typographical errors.

From Salon • Oct. 4, 2021

Prof Walter Skeat, 19th-Century father of English etymology, thought at times that the word for a "loop" in a rope came from Celtic, at others that it was Scandinavian.

From BBC • Mar. 21, 2016

Skeat retranslated the inked inscription on the mummy's chest wrappings, announced that the boy's name was Panechates, son of Hatres.

From Time Magazine Archive

Done into modern metrical English with introduction and notes by Prof. W. W. Skeat.

From The Book of the Duke of True Lovers by Pisan, Christin? de

Frosch; Skeat suggests a possible original source in the root meaning “to jump,” “to spring,” cf.

From Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 11, Slice 2 "French Literature" to "Frost, William" by Various

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