To not go to class without permission.
Play truant from work or school.
Sinònims
Examples for "play hooky"
Examples for "play hooky"
1We're both going to stay home and play hooky all week.
2Aunt Helen wouldn't let any kid play hooky, you bet.
3Can't you play hooky for the afternoon?
4To play hooky and go nutting is far better than to study and fit himself for earning a livelihood.
5In the weeks to come he might be able to play hooky and go out on the occasional afternoon hike.
1Thinking about the dinner party-andafterward, when she and Allan would bunk off together.
2I log out of the secure terminal and bunk off home early: your taxes at work.
3You could perhaps bunk off work and invite the postman in for a cup of tea.
4Roger Topley used to bunk off every week so Sanderson never even had his name on the register.'
5I was about 14 and I used to bunk off school and gets teas for the stunt teams.
6He would bunk off school but spend all day at the library, picking books at random off the shelves.
7My mum had let me bunk off school, I went to cross the road, ran before looking and got hit.
8A Northland principal says some parents are falsely claiming they're home-schooling their children when they're simply allowing them to bunk off.
9When a mother is called upon to bunk off work to attend a nativity play, her unpartnered colleague is expected to take up the slack.
10Young lad over there, he's bunked off school to come and see you.'
11Two schoolgirls running like wildfire, bunking off through dunes to the sea, breathless.
12Bunk Off Early, Crack Mome and Cilaos Emery would probably be the others.
13If you'd ever bunked off school, this was bunking-off writ large.
14Anywhere else, I would have suspected he was bunking off school.
15By 12, he was bunking off to play video games instead.
16Boris Johnson must have bunked off that day, because he clearly missed that lesson.
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