Skeeve vs Keeve - What's the difference?
skeeve | keeve |
(informal) To be disgusted.
*{{quote-news, year=2009, date=May 28, author=Penelope Green, title=Jersey Girls, Nesting, work=New York Times
, passage=Indeed, when baby-voiced Teresa describes the bone-crunching finishes in her new home, a 12,000-square-foot French chateau simulacrum that’s “all granite, marble and onyx,” and avers her commitment to the brand-spanking new (“I just skeeve looking at other people’s houses,” she says. }}
(brewing) A vat or tub in which the mash is made; a mash tub.
(bleaching) A bleaching vat; a kier.
(mining) A large vat used in dressing ores.
To set in a keeve, or tub, for fermentation.
(UK, dialect) To heave; to tilt, as a cart.
As verbs the difference between skeeve and keeve
is that skeeve is (informal) to be disgusted while keeve is to set in a keeve, or tub, for fermentation.As a noun keeve is
(brewing) a vat or tub in which the mash is made; a mash tub.skeeve
English
Verb
(skeev)citation
