Military. a fight between small bodies of troops, esp. advanced or outlying detachments of opposing armies.
2.
any brisk conflict or encounter: She had a skirmish with her landlord about the rent.
–verb (used without object)
3.
to engage in a skirmish.
Origin: 1300–50; (n.) ME skirmysshe < OF eskirmiss-, long s. of eskirmir < Gmc (cf. OHG skirman); r. ME scarmouche < OF escaramoucher (see Scaramouch); (v.) late ME scarmuchen, scarmusshen to skirmish, ME skirmisshen to brandish a weapon < OF escar(a)mucher to skirmish; vowels influenced by OF eskirmiss-
A minor battle in war, as one between small forces or between large forces avoiding direct conflict.
A minor or preliminary conflict or dispute: a skirmish over the rules before the debate began.
intr.v.
skir·mished, skir·mish·ing, skir·mish·es To engage in a minor battle or dispute.
[Middle English skirmisshe, alteration (influenced by Middle English skirmisshen, to brandish a weapon) of skarmush, from Old French eskarmouch, from Old Italian scaramuccia, of Germanic origin; see sker-1 in Indo-European roots.] skir'mish·er n.
c.1300, from O.Fr. escarmouche "skirmish," from It. scaramuccia, probably from a Gmc. source (cf. O.H.G. skirmen "to protect, defend"), influenced in M.E. by a separate verb skirmysshen "to brandish a weapon," from O.Fr. eskirmiss-, stem of eskirmir "to fence," from Frankish *skirmjan, from the same Gmc. source. The verb is attested from c.1470. Cf. also scrimmage.