skelf
Icelandic
Scots
Etymology 1
Uncertain. Perhaps from Middle Dutch schelf (“a scale, flake or splinter of wood”).
Noun
skelf (plural skelfs)
- A splinter or sliver of wood.
- A thin or diminutive person.
- 1992, Iain Banks, The Crow Road:
- 'Like I say; I could have got the baby-sitter to help me with him, but she's just a skelf...not our regular girl.'
- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
Etymology 2
From Middle English schelfe and Old Norse skjalf, both ultimately from Proto-Germanic *skelfō.
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