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    Scut·tle
    /ˈskəd(ə)l/

    verb

    • 1. sink (one's own ship) deliberately by holing it or opening its seacocks to let water in.

    noun

    • 1. an opening with a lid in a ship's deck or side: "a shaft of sunlight blazed through the cabin scuttle"
  2. verb (used with object) , scut·tled, scut·tling. to sink (a vessel) deliberately, especially by opening seacocks or making openings in the hull. to abandon, withdraw from, or cause to be abandoned or destroyed (as plans, hopes, rumors, etc.). scuttle.

  3. n. 1. a. a small hatch or port in the deck, side, or bottom of a vessel. b. a cover for this. 2. a small hatchlike opening in a roof or ceiling. v.t. 3. to sink (a vessel) deliberately by opening seacocks or making openings in the bottom. 4. to abandon or destroy (plans, rumors, etc.).

  4. Use the word scuttle when you want to describe running or fast walking thats characterized by short, hasty steps, like someone or something that tries to hurry — a person who is late for work scuttling through a crowd of slow-moving pedestrians — but can't. Scuttle has a number of other meanings.

  5. 2 days ago · scuttle in American English. (ˈskʌtəl ) noun. 1. a broad, open basket for carrying grain, vegetables, etc. 2. a kind of bucket, usually with a wide lip, used for pouring coal on a fire. : in full coal scuttle. Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition.

  6. Origin of scuttle 1 First recorded in 1490–1500; of obscure origin; perhaps from Middle French escoutille or Spanish escotillahatchway,” equivalent to Spanish escot(e) “a cutting of cloth” + -illa, diminutive suffix; of Germanic origin; compare Gothic skaut “hem, seam”; see also sheet 1 )

  7. Definition of scuttle verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. Mar 23, 2024 · A container like an open bucket (usually to hold and carry coal).

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