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 Jessisun
 
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							| How do you say this in English? 
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							| Hi, everyone! I need some help with a expression in English. Yesterday one of my students asked me how to say in English when a student decides not to go to school without their parents � knowledge; that �s to say when a student pretends to attend to class but s/he goes to somewhere else such to a shopping centre or to a ark or any other place and they go back home as if they had been at school. I hope you can help me with this!!! Thanks a lot! |  24 Jul 2013      
					
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 mariontx
 
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							| I think it �s "to play hooky." |  24 Jul 2013     
					
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 MarionG
 
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							| the casual way to say this would be "to skip school/class"
 or "to play hooky/hookie" (but somehow that sounds a bit old fashioned, is it still used?)
The more official term is  �truancy � or to  �be truant �
hope this helps |  24 Jul 2013     
					
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 alien boy
 
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							| In Australia we�d commonly say  �wag �. 
 i.e. I�m going to wag school tomorrow.
 I�ll be wagging maths this afternoon.
 
 An English co worker said he�d most likely use  �skip �.
 
 i.e. He�s skipping school today.
 He�ll skip Science in 6th period.
 
 Hope that helps!
 
 Cheers,
 AB
 
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 Jessisun
 
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							| Thank you all of you for your replies!! They helped me a lot!!! |  24 Jul 2013     
					
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 alex076
 
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							| I thought it was "skive off school" ...is this expression wrong? Thanks,  Alex |  24 Jul 2013     
					
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 alien boy
 
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							| Hi Alex! 
 I�d forgetten all about skiving! I�m more used to using that in relation to work rather than school... but that could just be a difference in vernacular.
 
 Cheers!
 
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 cunliffe
 
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							| In the last school I was in, the kids used to  �wag �. In the last but one, they used to  �twag. �  �Truant � is the correct form.  �He �s truanting. �  �Skip � would apply to one lesson rather than a whole day. I haven �t heard  �skiving off school � but kids use  �skive � all the time for internal truanting i.e. missing a lesson here and there. |  25 Jul 2013     
					
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 almaz
 
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							| Like most kids in Glasgow, I used to use  �doggin� it�* for truanting. It�s still used, but when I started teaching further along the west coast of Scotland, I was hearing  �skidging� a lot. At various times, I�ve also heard - usually from colleagues from other parts of the country -  �plunking (off)�,  �bunking (off)�,  �skiving (off)� and a few obscure others which escape me at the moment. 
 
 *get your mind out of the gutter (you know who you are   ) |  25 Jul 2013     
					
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 joy2bill
 
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							| There �s also the expression " bunking" or "doing a bunk" to mean skiving or wagging. 
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