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Skelp vs Skep - What's the difference?

skelp | skep |

As nouns the difference between skelp and skep

is that skelp is a blow; a smart stroke or skelp can be a narrow strip of rolled or forged metal, ready to be bent and welded to form a pipe while skep is a basket.

As a verb skelp

is (transitive|scotland|northern england) to beat or slap.

skelp

English

Etymology 1

Probably imitative.

Verb

(en verb)
  • (transitive, Scotland, northern England) To beat or slap.
  • *1932 , (Lewis Grassic Gibbon), Sunset Song'', Polygon 2006 (''A Scots Quair ), p. 24:
  • *:But Mistress Munro would up and be at the door and in she'd yank Andy by the lug, and some said she'd take down his breeks and skelp him, but maybe that was a lie.
  • *2008 , (James Kelman), Kieron Smith, Boy , Penguin 2009, p. 67:
  • *:My stomach was just sore and I was rubbing it. But he just reached and skelped' me on the leg and I fell down and he waited for me to get up and he ' skelped me on the b*m.
  • Noun

    (en noun)
  • A blow; a smart stroke.
  • (Brockett)
  • (Scotland) A squall; a heavy fall of rain.
  • Etymology 2

    (wikipedia skelp)

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • A narrow strip of rolled or forged metal, ready to be bent and welded to form a pipe.
  • * 1836 , William Newton (editor), The London Journal of Arts and Sciences; and Repertory of Patent Inventions , pages 407-8,
  • he then heats one half of the skelp' at a time in an air furnace, or other fire, and having so heated it, he passes the '''skelp''' between a pair of grooved rollers placed at the mouth of the furnace, for the purpose of uniting (or marrying, as he terms it) the edges of the metal ; that is, causing the edges of the open part of the ' skelp to be pressed together, and made to adhere and form a complete cylinder.
    ----

    skep

    English

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • a basket
  • a beehive made of straw or wicker
  • :* 1977': He prised a '''skep from its stool and held it out, inverted, showing the dirty wreck of combs, with the vile grubs spinning their cocoons. — Patrick O'Brian, ''The Mauritius Command
  • Derived terms

    *