sqush
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- IPA(key): /skwʊʃ/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
- (Scotland, Northern Ireland) IPA(key): /skwʉʃ/
- Rhymes: -ʊʃ
Verb
[edit]sqush (third-person singular simple present squshes, present participle squshing, simple past and past participle squshed)
- (intransitive, US, rare) To squash or squelch.
- 1885, Mark Twain, Huckleberry Finn:
- Blamed if the king didn't have to brace up mighty quick, or he'd a squshed down like a bluff bank that the river has cut under, it took him so sudden.
- 1909, Mary Mapes Dodge, St. Nicholas: A Monthly Magazine for Boys and Girls:
- […] it was little better than a swamp, and at every step their shoes went sqush […]
- 1939, Dalton Trumbo, Johnny Got His Gun, page 12:
- His feet squshed in the water as he went […] He tip-toed upstairs his wet shoes still squshing a little.
- 1965, Ezra Pound, The Cantos:
- […] a "throne", something God can sit on without having it sqush […]
- 1855, Walt Whitman, “Song of Myself”, in Leaves of Grass, page 36:
- […] At the cider-mill, tasting the sweet of the brown sqush....sucking the juice through a straw,