skip out on / skɪp /

略过跳过了跳过略去

skip out on4 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb

skipped, skip·ping.

  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 intervenes: He skipped through the book quickly.
  3. to go away hastily and secretly; flee without notice.
v. 有主动词 verb

skipped, skip·ping.

  1. to jump lightly over: The horse skipped the fence.
  2. to pass over without reading, noting, acting, etc.: He skipped the bad parts.
  3. to miss or omit: My heart skipped a beat.
n. 名词 noun
  1. a skipping movement; a light jump or bounce.
  2. a gait marked by such jumps.
  3. a passing from one point or thing to another, with disregard of what intervenes: a quick skip through Europe.
v. 动词组 verb
  1. skip out on, Informal. to flee or abandon; desert: He skipped out on his wife and two children.

skip out on 近义词

skip out on

等同于 avoid

skip out on

等同于 sidestep

skip out on

等同于 default

skip out on

等同于 dodge

skip out on构成的短语

  • skip bail
  • skip it
  • skip out
  • heart misses (skips) a beat
  • hop, skip, and a jump

更多skip out on例句

  1. That seems like an opportunity for the app to have deeper playback controls, such as skip track backward, fast forward, and rewind, but perhaps JBL will add those in an update.
  2. Even a brief skip across the floor after falling from the charger or a quick scrap against a wall can be enough contact to leave a scratch that will annoy you for the rest of the gadget’s life.
  3. Ultimately, 2015 might be the year American anti-LGBT advocates wish they could skip.
  4. But failing that, he advised pro-immigration reform Republican candidates such as former Gov. Jeb Bush to just skip the state.
  5. But the man appears so weary that I decide to skip the dull stuff and get to the heat.
  6. The human attention span is evolving in such a way that they can skip around.
  7. She jumped at the chance to watch RT, or jumped at the chance to skip calculus homework.
  8. Well, though they do muster strong, we may make Edward's party skip for all that; if we have but justice on our side.
  9. Nobody could read it twice, of 276 course; and the first time even it was necessary to skip.
  10. Now and then a gun was fired at the Indians, forcing them to skip nimbly behind the trees.
  11. It is probable that the word was the same in both passages,though whether skip or slip I have no means of determining.
  12. Let him skip, if, like myself, he is weary; for the substance of the story is elsewhere given.