WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026
skew•ing  (skyo̅o̅ing),USA pronunciation n. 
  1. a process of removing excess gold leaf from a stamped surface.
  2. skewings, the gold leaf so removed.
  • origin, originally uncertain 1850–55

WordReference Random House Learner's Dictionary of American English © 2026
skew /skyu/USA pronunciation   v. 
  1. to turn aside or swerve:[no object]cars skewing off the road.
  2. to distort;
    misrepresent:[+ object]The accounting department skewed data and figures to show that the company was operating at a profit.

adj. 
  1. having a slanting direction or position.

WordReference Random House Unabridged Dictionary of American English © 2026
skew  (skyo̅o̅),USA pronunciation v.i. 
  1. to turn aside or swerve;
    take an oblique course.
  2. to look obliquely;
    squint.

v.t. 
  1. to give an oblique direction to;
    shape, form, or cut obliquely.
  2. Radio and Television, Slang Terms[Slang.]to make conform to a specific concept, attitude, or planned result;
    slant:The television show is skewed to the young teenager.
  3. to distort;
    depict unfairly.

adj. 
  1. having an oblique direction or position;
    slanting.
  2. having a part that deviates from a straight line, right angle, etc.:skew gearing.
  3. Mathematics(of a dyad or dyadic) equal to the negative of its conjugate.
  4. (of an arch, bridge, etc.) having the centerline of its opening forming an oblique angle with the direction in which its spanning structure is built.
  5. Statistics(of a distribution) having skewness.

n. 
  1. an oblique movement, direction, or position.
  2. BuildingAlso called skew chis′el. a wood chisel having a cutting edge set obliquely.
  • Middle Dutch schuwen to get out of the way, shun, derivative of schu (Dutch schuw) shy1; (adjective, adjectival) derivative of the verb, verbal (probably influenced by askew); (noun, nominal) derivative of the verb, verbal and adjective, adjectival
  • (verb, verbal) Middle English skewen to slip away, swerve 1350–1400

Collins Concise English Dictionary © HarperCollins Publishers::
skew /skjuː/ adj
  1. placed in or turning into an oblique position or course
  2. having a component that is at an angle to the main axis of an assembly or is in some other way asymmetrical: a skew bevel gear
  3. composed of or being elements that are neither parallel nor intersecting as, for example, two lines not lying in the same plane in a three-dimensional space
  4. (of a statistical distribution) not having equal probabilities above and below the mean; non-normal
  5. distorted or biased
n
  1. an oblique, slanting, or indirect course or position
vb
  1. to take or cause to take an oblique course or direction
  2. (intransitive) to look sideways; squint
  3. (transitive) to distort or bias
Etymology: 14th Century: from Old Norman French escuer to shun, of Germanic origin; compare Middle Dutch schuwen to avoid

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