: a metal frame that can be fitted to the sole of a shoe and to which is attached a runner or a set of wheels for gliding over ice or a surface other than ice
Verb
hockey players skating into position
Couples skated around the rink.
She skated an excellent program in the competition.
We skate at the park.
The bugs skated along the surface of the water.
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Noun
Her part involves a small scene in a flashback but required her to learn how to roller-skate.—
Catherine Santino,
PEOPLE,
22 June 2026 Visitors are welcome to walk, skate, bike, play and explore along the route.—
Jaclyn Cosgrove,
Los Angeles Times,
25 June 2026
Verb
There are flag sweaters and skate sneakers and prairie skirts; there are Cheyanne moccasins and Mennonite bonnets and the not-quite-holy Yankees baseball cap.—
Faran Krentcil,
InStyle,
1 July 2026 Moore, 24, skated in 77 of the Ducks’ 94 games last year between the regular season and playoffs.—
Andrew Knoll,
Oc Register,
25 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for skate
Word History
Etymology
Noun (1)
Middle English scate, from Old Norse skata
Noun (2)
modification of Dutch schaats, from Middle Dutch schaetse stilt, from Old French dialect (Flanders, Hainaut) *escace, probably of Germanic origin; akin to Old English sceacan to shake — more at shake
Noun (3)
probably alteration of English dialect skite an offensive person