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Squat   /skwɑt/   Listen
adjective
Squat  adj.  (compar. squatter; superl. squattest)  
1.
Sitting on the hams or heels; sitting close to the ground; cowering; crouching. "Him there they found, Squat like a toad, close at the ear of Eve."
2.
Short and thick, like the figure of an animal squatting. "The round, squat turret." "The head (of the squill insect) is broad and squat."



noun
Squat  n.  (Zool.) The angel fish (Squatina angelus).



Squat  n.  
1.
The posture of one that sits on his heels or hams, or close to the ground.
2.
A sudden or crushing fall. (Obs.)
3.
(Mining)
(a)
A small vein of ore.
(b)
A mineral consisting of tin ore and spar.
Squat snipe (Zool.), the jacksnipe; called also squatter. (Local, U.S.)



verb
Squat  v. t.  To bruise or make flat by a fall. (Obs.)



Squat  v. i.  (past & past part. squatted; pres. part. squatting)  
1.
To sit down upon the hams or heels; as, the savages squatted near the fire.
2.
To sit close to the ground; to cower; to stoop, or lie close, to escape observation, as a partridge or rabbit.
3.
To settle on another's land without title; also, to settle on common or public lands.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Squat" Quotes from Famous Books



... company with an American, who had gone into the shop with me. This American is a sort of transatlantic Bunsby. He talks little, but thinks much. His sole observation to me as we walked away was this, "They will squat, sir, mark my words, they will squat." I received this oracular utterance with respect, and I leave it to others to solve its meaning, I am myself a person of singular credulity, but even I sometimes ask myself whether all I hear and read can be true. Was there ...
— Diary of the Besieged Resident in Paris • Henry Labouchere

... of Casuarinas is a magnificent specimen of a wide-spreading shrub, in form a squat dome, which commemorates the name of a French naturalist—TOURNEFORTIA ARGENTA. The leaves, crowded at the ends of thick branchlets, are covered with soft, silky hairs of a silvery cast, which reflect the sun's rays. It would ...
— Tropic Days • E. J. Banfield

... of Romanesque feeling, but the church having been much pulled about in the thirteenth century, it came to have a semi-Byzantine choir and two depressed domes, quite Byzantine, over the nave. The facade, with its squat towers, exhibits no lofty aim, but when one looks at the tabernacle-work in the tympan of the divided portal, the capitals in the jambs and the mouldings of the archivolts, the elegant arcade above and the tracery of ...
— Wanderings by southern waters, eastern Aquitaine • Edward Harrison Barker

... human, I guessed; to judge by the small squat head, and still more by a thing like a tail or extra limb turned up behind and pointing, like a loathsome large finger, at some symbol graven in the centre of the vast stone back. I had begun, in the dim light, ...
— The Wisdom of Father Brown • G. K. Chesterton

... told him he could get four hundred pounds for it by going back to Pniel. "But," said he, "my face is turned so; and when Squat turn his face so, he going home. Not can bear go the other way then," and he held out his hand ...
— A Simpleton • Charles Reade


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