Scuff

来自Big Physics

wiktionary

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From Scots scuff(“to touch lightly, graze, hit”), of obscure origin. Perhaps from Old Norse skúfa(“to shove, push aside”), from Proto-Germanic *skeubaną(“to shove”). Or, perhaps imitative. More at English shove.

scuff (plural scuffs)


etymonline

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scuff (v.)

1768, "to walk (through or over something) without raising the feet," from Scottish, probably from a Scandinavian source related to Old Norse skufa, skyfa "to shove, push aside," from PIE *skeubh- "to shove" (see shove (v.)). Meaning "injure the surface of" is from 1897. Related: Scuffed; scuffing. As a noun from 1824.