English edit

Pronunciation edit

Etymology 1 edit

Possibly related to squirt (small child); from 19th c.

Noun edit

squit (countable and uncountable, plural squits)

  1. (derogatory, informal, countable) A person of low status.
    • 1989, Richard Curtis, Ben Elton, Blackadder Goes Forth (episode "Goodbyeee"):
      Not a favourite son, of course — Lord, no! — more a sort of illegitimate backstairs sort of sprog, you know: a sort of spotty squit that nobody really likes.
    • 2000, Josie Lloyd, Emlyn Rees, Come Again, page 153:
      'It isn't so funny when it's the other way round, is it?' I snarl, before adding, 'You geeky little squit,' for good measure.
    • 2007, Katharine Whitehorn, Selective Memory, unnumbered page:
      I couldn't believe my ears: at Roedean a new girl spent at least a term having it drummed into her what an insignificant little squit she was; and here were these girls being welcoming!
  2. (Norfolk, uncountable) Nonsense; amusing stories.
    • 2007, Keith Skipper, Keith Skipper's Bumper Book of Norfolk Squit: High jinks, hilarity & hot air from Norfolk's favourite raconteur[1]:
    • 2007, Ann Neve, Ride Upon the Storm, page 162:
      'Cor blast, Tovell, you don't half talk some squit at times!' exclaimed Ted Carter.
      Squit! It's the gospel truth. []
    • 2009, Alison Weir, The Lady In The Tower: The Fall of Anne Boleyn, page 420:
      In 1985, asked by the writer Richard Whittington-Egan if he believed in this apparition, an old local man replied that it was ‘a load of old squit.’

Etymology 2 edit

Short for server quit.

Verb edit

squit (third-person singular simple present squits, present participle squitting, simple past and past participle squitted)

  1. (transitive, Internet) To disconnect (an IRC server) from a network.
    • 1994, Bernhard Lorenz, “ChanOp for Irc Opers”, in alt.irc (Usenet):
      [] these problems solved themselves atfter[sic] some 10 minutes or so, without an ircop interferring[sic] into channel affairs by squitting his/her server to gain chanop status.
    • 1996, Jesse, “A warning to all irc users”, in alt.irc (Usenet):
      Today, I was awakened by a call from one of my IRC ops, telling me that my net had been 'taken over'. An ircop had squitted all the servers, and had a script that kept them disconnected from the net.

Etymology 3 edit

Imitative.

Noun edit

squit (plural squits)

  1. (onomatopoeia) A light squishing or splattering sound.
    • 2007, S. M. Stirling, The Sunrise Lands, page 79:
      "Mr. Kuttner, you know I'm the best in this business, don't you?" he said, swatting at a mosquito.
      It went squit and left a smear of blood on his cheek.
    • 2021, Malcolm Devlin, Unexpected Places to Fall From, Unexpected Places to Land:
      She turned away and stalked back through the lounge, her running shoes making a squit-squit-squit sound on the tiles, punctuated by the slam of the front door.

See also edit

Anagrams edit