Verb
The kids were scampering around the yard.
A mouse scampered across the floor.
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Verb
Billy Kilmer to cough up the ball, Marshall scooped it up and scampered 66 yards into the end zone — the wrong way.—Dave Campbell, Chicago Tribune, 3 June 2025 Catcher Jake Rogers scampered from first to third and later scored.—Cody Stavenhagen, New York Times, 30 May 2025
Noun
Sure, Amelia gets to do some cool stuff like scamper on all fours toward a target, scramble down a wall like a spider, rip the head off one poor unfortunate and neutralize entire tactical units with her dazzling fight skills.—David Rooney, HollywoodReporter, 25 June 2025 The 5-foot-10 ½, 216-pound Jackson showcased his skill set with a spring-game record 198 yards and 3 touchdowns, including a 90-yard scamper.—Edgar Thompson, The Orlando Sentinel, 14 June 2025 See All Example Sentences for scamper
Word History
Etymology
Verb
probably from obsolete Dutch schampen to flee, from Middle French escamper, from Italian scampare, from Vulgar Latin *excampare to decamp, from Latin ex- + campus field
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