释义 |
skiving
skive 1 S0455800 (skīv)tr.v. skived, skiv·ing, skives To cut thin layers off (leather or rubber, for example); pare. [Of Scandinavian origin; see skei- in Indo-European roots.]
skive 2 S0455800 (skīv)intr.v. skived, skiv·ing, skives Chiefly British Slang To avoid work or duty; shirk. [Perhaps from French esquiver, to dodge (from Spanish, esquivar or Italian, eschivare, both ultimately of Germanic origin; akin to Old English scēoh, shy) or from English dialectal skive, to move quickly.]IdiomsSeeskiveskiving
skiving[′skīv·iŋ] (mechanical engineering) Removal of material in thin layers or chips with a high degree of shear or slippage of the cutting tool. A machining operation in which the cut is made with a form tool with its face at an angle allowing the cutting edge to progress from one end of the work to the other as the tool feeds tangentially past ten rotating workpieces. |