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"skite" Definitions
  1. [chiefly dialectal] to move quickly or hurriedly
  2. [chiefly Scottish] to strike an object with a glancing blow : RICOCHET, SKIP
  3. [chiefly dialectal] a sudden glancing blow or impact
  4. [dialectal] TRICK, PRANK
  5. a disagreeable offensive person
  6. BOAST, BRAG
  7. BRAGGART, BOASTER

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7 Sentences With "skite"

How to use skite in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "skite" and check conjugation/comparative form for "skite". Mastering all the usages of "skite" from sentence examples published by news publications.

UPDATE: BLATHERSKITE seems to be a portmanteau of BLATHER and the Scottish suffix -SKITE, which is Scots for a word I cannot use here.
Skite of Agiou Panteleimonos at Holy Skites of Mount Athos.
Mount Athos The Skete of Prophet Elijah (, ) is a cenobitic skete of Pantokratoros monastery in Mount Athos, Greece. It was founded in 1759 by the Ukrainian monk from Poltava Paisius Velichkovsky. SKITE OF PROPHET ELIAS at Holy Skites of Mount Athos. Within the complex are a main church (built 1903) and three chapels.
Mount Athos The Skete of the Annunciation of the Theotokos is a skete of the Monastery of Xenophontos, on Mount Athos, Greece. The skete was founded in 1766 Holy Skites of Mount Athos (SKITE OF ANNUNCIATION OF THE VIRGIN). by the hieromonk Sylvester, and the monks Efrem and Agapios. The Skete of Annunciation of the Mother of God.
New Zealand English terms of Australian origin include bushed (lost or bewildered), chunder (to vomit), drongo (a foolish or stupid person), fossick (to search), jumbuck (sheep, from Australian pidgin), larrikin (mischievous person), Maccas (slang for McDonald's food), maimai (a duckshooter's hide; originally a makeshift shelter, from aboriginal mia-mia), paddock (field, or meadow), pom or pommy (an Englishman), skite (verb: to boast), station (for a very large farm), wowser (non-drinker of alcohol, or killjoy), and ute (pickup truck).
Drumlithie is a village in the northeast of ScotlandUnited Kingdom Ordnance Survey Map Landranger 45, Stonehaven and Banchory, 1:50,000 scale, 2004 in the area known as the Howe o' the Mearns. Situated seven miles south of Stonehaven in Aberdeenshire, it is affectionately known by locals as 'Skite', although the origin of this name remains disputed. Previously a weaving village, Drumlithie has a small steeple at its heart which was rung to signal the start and end of the working day. Ask a local what happens to the steeple when it rains and it is sure to raise a smile.
In 1992, Christine De Smedt was part of the interdisciplinary SKITE project (laboratoire de nouvelles formes chorégraphiques) in Paris, where her first artistic encounter with the American choreographer Meg Stuart took place. She also collaborated with Meg Stuart and her company Damaged Goods between 1995 and 1999. In 1996, she danced in the remake of Stuart's debut choreography Disfigure Study (Meg Stuart / Damaged Goods, 1991), and assisted the choreographer as a coach for this remake.Page about Disfigure Study (Meg Stuart / Damaged Goods, 1991) on the website of Meg Stuart / Damaged Goods In addition, she worked as a dancer on No One's Watching (Meg Stuart / Damaged Goods, 1995)Page about No One Is Watching (Meg Stuart / Damaged Goods, 1995) on the website of Meg Stuart / Damaged Goods and Splayed Mind Out (Meg Stuart / Damaged Goods and Gary Hill, 1997) ).

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