Noun
They found the fossil skeleton of a mastodon.
He hung a plastic skeleton on the door for Halloween.
She was a skeleton after her illness.
Only the charred skeleton of the house remained after the fire.
We saw a skeleton of the report before it was published.
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Noun
The remains of five early humans—two complete skeletons and three skulls—were found deliberately arranged in burial pits deep inside Tinshemet Cave in central Israel.—Amir Daftari, MSNBC Newsweek, 30 July 2025 Two days later, on July 10, the researchers uncovered the knight’s entire skeleton about five inches below where the tombstone sat.—Karissa Waddick, USA Today, 29 July 2025
Adjective
Six weeks after his birth, Rivera and Dorsey gave the first glimpse at their newborn by posting a picture of him on Instagram in a skeleton Halloween costume.—Ariana Quihuiz, Peoplemag, 29 June 2023 See All Example Sentences for skeleton
Word History
Etymology
Noun
New Latin, from Greek, neuter of skeletos dried up; akin to Greek skellein to dry up, sklēros hard and perhaps to Old English sceald shallow
: a firm supporting or protecting structure or framework of a living thing
especially: a framework made of bone or sometimes cartilage that supports the soft tissues and protects the internal organs of a vertebrate (as a fish or human being) compare endoskeleton, exoskeleton
2
: a very thin person or animal
3
: something forming a structural framework
skeleton
2 of 2adjective
1
: of, consisting of, or resembling a skeleton
a skeleton hand
2
: consisting of the smallest possible number of persons who can get a job done
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