The AI-powered English dictionary
third-person singular simple present skedaddles, present participle skedaddling, simple past and past participle skedaddled
(informal, intransitive, US) To move or run away quickly. quotations examples
"Well," continued the youth, "lots of good-a-'nough men have thought they was going to do great things before the fight, but when the time come they skedaddled."
1895 October, Stephen Crane, chapter II, in The Red Badge of Courage: An Episode of the American Civil War, New York, N.Y.: D[aniel] Appleton and Company, page 29
Looked up at your office and all of it empty and I nearly cried. Cigar guy, out viewing his big time display window comes across the street. Wants to know if he can help. Told him to mind his own business. You know what he said, sister if you got any connection with that guy, they caught up with him, so you better beat it. I said sic him Goliath. Did that guy skidaddle.[Goliath is a dog.]
1963, J P Donleavy, A Singular Man, published 1963 (USA), page 204
Then filled with inspiration he drove in his Buick, the busted muffler blasting in the country lanes and the great long car skedaddling dangerously on the curves. Lucky for the woodchucks they were already hibernating.
1976 September, Saul Bellow, Humboldt’s Gift, New York, N.Y.: Avon Books, page 122
In the early 1960s, there were plenty of people still alive who had looted Europe in the Second World War, parked proceeds in Switzerland, and skedaddled to Argentina.
2018, Oliver Bullough, chapter 2, in Moneyland, page 41
(transitive, regional) To spill; to scatter. examples
plural skedaddles
(informal) The act of running away; a scurrying off. examples