| SCANDALS | • scandals n. Plural of scandal. • SCANDAL v. to defame. |
| SCANDENT | • scandent adj. (Botany) Climbing, without obvious morphological adaptations. • SCANDENT adj. climbing as a plant. |
| SCANDIAS | • SCANDIA n. an oxide of scandium. |
| SCANDIUM | • scandium n. A metallic chemical element, atomic number 21, obtained from some uranium ores; it is a transition element. • SCANDIUM n. a rare metallic element of the boron group. |
| SCANNERS | • scanners n. Plural of scanner. • SCANNER n. a device for scanning documents. |
| SCANNING | • scanning v. Present participle of scan. • scanning n. The act of something being scanned. • SCANNING n. close examination. |
| SCANSION | • scansion n. The rhythm or meter of a line or verse. • scansion n. The act of analysing the meter of poetry. • scansion v. (Of text) Put into a rhythmic form or meter. |
| SCANTEST | • scantest adj. Superlative form of scant: most scant. • SCANT adj. scarce. |
| SCANTIER | • scantier adj. Comparative form of scanty: more scanty. • SCANTY adj. poorly supplied. |
| SCANTIES | • scanties n. Small panties; skimpy underwear for a woman or girl. • SCANTIES n. brief panties for women. |
| SCANTILY | • scantily adv. Sparingly; not plentifully; not fully; in a scanty manner. • SCANTY adv. poorly supplied. |
| SCANTING | • scanting v. Present participle of scant. • SCANT v. to cut short, to spare. |
| SCANTITY | • scantity n. The quality of being scant or sparse. • SCANTITY n. scantness. |
| SCANTLED | • scantled v. Simple past tense and past participle of scantle. • SCANTLE v. to stint, make scant. |
| SCANTLES | • scantles v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of scantle. • SCANTLE v. to stint, make scant. |