1. To slope, S.

2. To move obliquely, S.

_Douglas._

3. To hit obliquely, S.

_Knox._

4. Denoting immoral conduct.

_Semple._

Sw. _slant_, obliquus; _slint-a_, lapsare.

~Sclent~, ~Sklent~, _s._

1. Obliquity, S.

2. Acclivity, ascent, S.

_Ross._

~A-Sklent~, _adv._ Obliquely.

_Polwart._

~Sclentine Ways~, _adv._ Obliquely, S. B.

_Morison._

SCLAYS, _s._ A slice, S. B.

_Wyntown._

Germ. _schleiss-en_, rumpere.

Sc.l.i.tHERS, _s. pl._ Loop stones lying in great quant.i.ties on the side of a rock, or hill, S. A.

_J. Nicol._

Germ. _schlitz-en_, disjungere.

_To_ SCOB, _v. n._ To sew clumsily, S.

SCOB, _s._

1. A splint, S.

2. In pl. the ribs of a basket, Ang.

Teut. _schobbe_, squama.

_To_ ~Scob~ _a skepp_, to fix cross rods in a bee-hive, S.

SCOB, _s._ An instrument for scooping, Clydes.

SCOB-SEIBOW, _s._

1. An onion that is allowed to remain in the ground during winter, S.

2. The young shoot from an onion, of the second year"s growth, S.

SCOLL.

V. ~Skul~.

SCOLDER, _s._ The oyster-catcher, Orkn.

_Barry._

SCOMER, SKOMER, _s._ A smell-feast.

Belg. _schuymer_, id.

_Dunbar._

_To_ SCOMFICE, SCONFICE, _v. a._

1. To suffocate, S.

_Ross._

2. _v. n._ To be stifled, S.

_Ibid._

Ital. _sconfigg-ere_, to discomfit.

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