skid

[ skid ]
/ skɪd /

noun

verb (used with object), skid·ded, skid·ding.

verb (used without object), skid·ded, skid·ding.

Idioms for skid

Origin of skid

1600–10; 1925–30 for def 18; apparently < Old Norse skith (noun), cognate with Old English scīd thin slip of wood; see ski

SYNONYMS FOR skid

9, 12 slip.
13 slither.

OTHER WORDS FROM skid

skid·ding·ly, adverb an·ti·skid·ding, adjective

British Dictionary definitions for put the skids under

skid
/ (skɪd) /

verb skids, skidding or skidded

noun

Derived forms of skid

skiddy, adjective

Word Origin for skid

C17: perhaps of Scandinavian origin; compare ski

Idioms and Phrases with put the skids under (1 of 2)

put the skids under

Bring about the failure or defeat of, as in It was lack of funds that put the skids under the new senior center. The skids here are runners or rollers on which a heavy object may be moved. [Colloquial; early 1900s]

Idioms and Phrases with put the skids under (2 of 2)

skid