Flee; take to one's heels; cut and run.
Singing jazz; the singer substitutes nonsense syllables for the words of the song and tries to sound like a musical instrument.
1 Most tourists want to see the animals, not the just the scat .
2 Tells how Mozart, Liszt, and Brahms used scat , and its modern development.
3 The tail end of a scat of rain beat on their faces.
4 Nodelman kept me waiting, without offering me a scat , a good half-hour.
5 I swear, the stuff tasted like armadillo scat mixed with swamp water.
6 To add to the smells coming from the piss - and - scat place, Horace assumed.
7 A scat of a thing as I can manage with my thumb!
8 I never was so thunderin' scat in all my life, by gum!
9 I thank you for doing your duty, but now you need to scat .
10 Her disparate reference points range from scat singing to folk and meditative music.
11 Earl Thorfin sent Thorkel Fosterer to the islands to gather in his scat .
12 Biologists mostly rely on tracks and scat to document the reclusive animal's presence.
13 Many of the artists are also scat singers and jazz poets.
14 Someplace with a parking lot so she could hang up and then scat .
15 He saw burrows, he saw tracks and scat , but no rats.
16 Many critics felt he was at his best when allowed to improvise and scat .
Другие примеры для термина "scat"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Scat в диалектах
Соединенные Штаты Америки