squat

squat
   1. to defecate
   The posture adopted and perhaps referring to the dialect meaning, to squirt:
    The authorities were trying to teach the people not to squat behind their huts. (M. McCarthy, 1967)
   For females, a squat may mean urination only.
   Some figurative use, as:
    ... the 52 has told me squat about the enemy now facing me. (Coyle, 1987 — the 52 is an American staff officer responsible for obtaining and disseminating information about the enemy)
   A squatter is a lavatory without a pedestal seat:
    I vowed never again to travel on a heap of coal slag, never again to stay in a hotel that smelt like a morgue, never again to use a squatter which belched up its contents over the user. (Dalrymple, 1989)
   2. to occupy (a building or land) by trespass
   Squatters' rights is an English legal concept dating from the social and economic need in the Middle Ages to see land and buildings, vacated and ownerless through plague, brought back into productive use. The verb is used both transitively:
    Hobo punks hop trains, squat abandoned buildings, collect welfare, and dumpster food. (Esquire, January 1994)
   and intransitively:
    She was working... to identify and locate people who are homeless or squatting in abandoned buildings. (Philadelphia Enquirer, 17 December 1989)
   A squat is such a trespass, or the property in which it happens:
    ... they eventually discovered his body in some squat. (B. Forbes, 1989)
   A squatter is someone who so trespasses:
    Squatters of empty, unused houses may be evicted after a summary hearing at which they cannot defend themselves and may be imprisoned if they refuse to move within 24 hours. (Kindred Spirit, Autumn 1994)
    except in New Zealand, where it meant a sheep farmer (Sinclair, 1991).

How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms. . 2014.

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  • squat — squat …   Dictionnaire des rimes

  • squat — [ skwat ] n. m. • v. 1975; de squatter ♦ Anglic. 1 ♦ Occupation d un immeuble par des squatteurs. 2 ♦ Habitation occupée par un squatteur. ● squat nom masculin (anglais to squat, s asseoir sur les talons) Action de squatter une habitation.… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • squat´ly — squat «skwot», verb, squat|ted or squat, squat|ting, adjective, noun. –v.i. 1. to sit on the heels; crouch: »He found it difficult to squat on his heels for more than a few minutes …   Useful english dictionary

  • Squat — (engl. von to squat, niederhocken) ist ein Begriff aus der Schifffahrt und bezeichnet das fahrdynamische vertikale Absinken eines Schiffes über den eigentlichen Tiefgang hinaus (Absunk oder Sunk), bei gleichzeitiger Vertrimmung. Die Vertrimmung… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Squat — Squat, a. 1. Sitting on the hams or heels; sitting close to the ground; cowering; crouching. [1913 Webster] Him there they found, Squat like a toad, close at the ear of Eve. Milton. [1913 Webster] 2. Short and thick, like the figure of an animal… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Squat — Squat, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Squatted}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Squatting}.] [OE. squatten to crush, OF. esquater, esquatir (cf. It. quatto squat, cowering), perhaps fr. L. ex + coactus, p. p. of cogere to drive or urge together. See {Cogent}, {Squash},… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Squat — Squat, n. 1. The posture of one that sits on his heels or hams, or close to the ground. [1913 Webster] 2. A sudden or crushing fall. [Obs.] Herbert. [1913 Webster] 3. (Mining) (a) A small vein of ore. (b) A mineral consisting of tin ore and spar …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • squat — [skwät] vi. squatted, squatting [ME squatten < MFr esquatir < es (L ex ), intens. + quatir, to press flat < VL * coactire < L coactus, pp. of cogere, to force, compress: see COGENT] 1. to crouch so as to sit on the heels with the… …   English World dictionary

  • Squat — (skw[o^]t), n. (Zo[ o]l.) The angel fish ({Squatina angelus}). [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Squat — Squat, v. t. To bruise or make flat by a fall. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • squat — [adj] short and stocky broad, chunky, dumpy*, fat, heavy, heavyset, splay, thick, thick bodied, thickset; concepts 491,773,779 Ant. lanky, skinny, slender, tall, thin squat [v] lower body by bending knees bow, cower, crouch, hunch, hunker down,… …   New thesaurus

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