scutter
English
Verb
scutter (third-person singular simple present scutters, present participle scuttering, simple past and past participle scuttered)
- To void thin excrement.
- 1565, Alois Brandl (ed.), King Daryus:
- Nay then I wil geue you no bread and butter.
Here, take some, it will make thee to scutter.
- Nay then I wil geue you no bread and butter.
- 1565, Alois Brandl (ed.), King Daryus:
- To run with a light pattering noise; to skitter.
- We saw a rat scuttering into a dark corner as we turned on the lights.
- Rudyard Kipling
- A mangy little jackal […] cocked up his ears and tail, and scuttered across the shallows.
- 1988, David Quammen, The Flight of the Iguana
- These [spiders] in my office were newborn babies. A hundred scuttering bambinos, each one no bigger than a poppyseed. Too small still for red hourglasses, too small even for red egg timers.
Derived terms
See also
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