Verb
The kids were scampering around the yard.
A mouse scampered across the floor.
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Verb
Jo Adell singled in Neto, and Mike Trout scampered home on an error on Bregman at third.—Los Angeles Times, 1 Apr. 2026 Wiemer scampered down the line for an infield single and had another base hit up the middle in Washington's 13-2 win on Monday over the Phillies to tie the record.—Logan Brown, MSNBC Newsweek, 31 Mar. 2026
Noun
In late March, turtles sun themselves at the river's edge; Gambel's quail scamper between the rocks.—Lauren Villagran, USA Today, 1 Apr. 2026 Maye showed no obvious signs of injury during the team’s win over the Denver Broncos on Sunday in the AFC Championship Game, including on his game-sealing scamper for a first down.—Chad Graff, New York Times, 27 Jan. 2026 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