scat
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++scat /skæt/ noun [uncountable] APMa style of jazz singing, in which the singer sings sounds rather than words 〔爵士乐中不唱歌词的〕拟声唱法
Examples from the Corpus
scat• Maude took a scat at the end of the table and laid her hands flat on the dark mahogany.• As Heather descended the hill Rufus awoke, barking and slavering ill the back scat.• bear scat• Bear scat was evident on the two-mile-long fire road leading into Mill Creek on this day.• I skip my usual bag of popcorn and I go and find my favorite scat.• When Matty returned to his scat on the mortgage desk, he appeared to have witnessed the end of the world.• I pull and pull and all I gain is maybe a quarter-inch off the leather scat.• I thought I should faint and leaned against the scat.• Susan was already off the window scat, looking for a place to tuck her sketch pad.Origin scat (1900-2000) Perhaps from the sound. scat nounChinese
singer jazz in of style the a which singing, Corpus
scat
scat /skæt/
noun [uncountable]
scat /skæt/
noun [uncountable] Date: 1900-2000
Origin: Perhaps from the sound.
a style of jazz singing, in which the singer sings sounds rather than words
Origin: Perhaps from the sound.