| 2. | skosh | ||
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Hey, Korey, you think you could crack the window a skosh? It smells like ass and country music in here.
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| 1. | skosh | ||
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A small amount of something.
From the Japanese word "sukoshi," pronounced skosh. That also means a little bit. "I'll have just a skosh of that pie..."
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| 3. | Skosh | ||
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a little bit. It was raining a skosh.
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| 4. | skosh | ||
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Can mean "a little bit", but can also mean sketchy or marginal. Can I have a skosh of cheese?
The weather is kind of skosh. |
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| 5. | skosh | ||
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(verb, transitive) to move something slightly. From the Japanese adjective sukoshi = a small amount, a bit, slightly.
(I first heard it used as a verb in 2000 by an American native-English speaker who hadn't studied Japanese, but had just hung around with Japanese exchange students in the US.) "Skosh that over just a bit."
"The frame on the wall was crooked so I skoshed it." |
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| 6. | skosh | ||
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The action of skanking and moshing mixed in to create the ultimate social phenomenon at a ska punk show. Closely related to choreomania. "Hold my glasses, I'm gonna skosh to Catch 22"
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| 7. | skosh | ||
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A versatile word that is useful in any situation, regardless of context.
Can be used in its formal tense as "a little bit of something" or as a healthy replacement for any obscene expletive contrived by the human race. "Son of a skosh! I just tripped over that large rock and really skoshed myself up! Ah well, I'll feel a skosh better in the skoshin morning after a couple skoshes of tequila. Then, I'll really feel skoshtastic. Skosh."
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