skedaddle
verb
ske·dad·dle
ski-ˈda-dᵊl
skedaddled; skedaddling
ski-ˈda-dᵊl-iŋ
-ˈdad-liŋ
; skedaddles
: to leave immediately : run away, scram
I've got to skedaddle or I'll be late.
Whenever there was work to be done, he skedaddled.
… of the five hundred and sixteen thousand immigrants who had come to Quebec since 1969 some three hundred and twelve thousand took a good look around and skedaddled.—Mordecai Richler
… Vietnam, a country that has been virtually closed to foreigners since the last American helicopter skedaddled from the embassy rooftop in 1975.—Stephen O'Shea
especially
: to flee in a panic
Little gray lizards skedaddle from our path. —Wells Tower
Though penguins can't outrun a lion, they can skedaddle on land if they really need to. —Diane Ackerman
… they took their money and skedaddled as the housing market collapsed. —Bill Saporito
skedaddler
ski-ˈda-dᵊl-ər
noun
-ˈdad-lər
plural skedaddlers
… soldiers running from their units—and civilians running to avoid becoming part of one—were dubbed skedaddlers.
—John Boyko
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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