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English-Tamil dictionary. 2014.
English-Tamil dictionary. 2014.
Skip Bayless — (born John Edward Bayless II December 4, 1951 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma) is an American journalist on ESPN2 s ESPN First Take and its afternoon show 1st and 10 . Bayless previously wrote regular columns for ESPN.com and its Page 2… … Wikipedia
skip — skip1 [skip] vi. skipped, skipping [ME skippen, prob. < Scand form akin to ON skopa, to jump, run < IE * skeub , to shoot, throw > SHOVE] 1. to leap, jump, or spring lightly; specif., to move along by hopping lightly on first one foot… … English World dictionary
skip — vb Skip, bound, hop, curvet, lope, lollop, ricochet can all mean to move or advance with successive springs or leaps .The first three words are commonly referable to persons or animals but they may be used in reference to inanimate things. Skip… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Skip list — Invented in 1990 by William Pugh, a skip list is a probabilistic data structure, based on multiple parallel, sorted linked lists, with efficiency comparable to a binary search tree (order log n average time for most operations).Underlying the… … Wikipedia
skip — skip1 [skıp] v past tense and past participle skipped present participle skipping ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(not do something)¦ 2¦(not deal with something)¦ 3¦(change subjects)¦ 4¦(movement)¦ 5¦(jump over a rope)¦ 6 skip town/skip the country 7 skip it! 8 ski … Dictionary of contemporary English
skip — skip1 [ skıp ] verb * 1. ) intransitive to move forward by jumping first on one foot and then the other: Julie skipped down the sidewalk. a ) transitive to jump over a rope that you or two other people swing above your head and then under your… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
skip — skip1 skippingly, adv. /skip/, v., skipped, skipping, n. v.i. 1. to move in a light, springy manner by bounding forward with alternate hops on each foot. 2. to pass from one point, thing, subject, etc., to another, disregarding or omitting what… … Universalium
skip — I [[t]skɪp[/t]] v. skipped, skip•ping, n. 1) cvb to move in a light, springy manner by bounding forward with alternate hops on each foot 2) to pass from one point, thing, etc., to another, disregarding or omitting what intervenes 3) to go away… … From formal English to slang
skip — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. caper, spring, leap, hop, trip, frisk, gambol, frolic; omit, pass over, stay away; ricochet; slang, decamp, play truant. See neglect, absence. II (Roget s IV) v. Syn. jump, caper, gambol, leap, bound … English dictionary for students
skip — skɪp n. act of skipping; bounce, spring, jump; act of passing over something, omission, exclusion v. move forward in a series of light jumps; leap lightly; pass over; leave out, exclude, omit; leave, flee, escape (Informal); fail to attend… … English contemporary dictionary
fast forward — n. 1. the setting on an electronic playback device, as a VCR, allowing the user to skip portions and advance at an accelerated speed to a later section of a disc, tape, etc. 2. the act or condition of speeding up and advancing … English World dictionary