Green’s Dictionary of Slang

skeeve v.

also skeeve out
[? Ital. schifoso, disgusting]

(US) to disgust, to repel; to act in a repellent manner (see cite 2023).

[US]S. Moore In The Cut 54: to skeeve, to disgust, repel.
Online Sl. Dict. 🌐 skeeve [...] v 1. to gross out, to sicken. (‘That guy really skeeves me out.’).
[US]Codella and Bennett Alphaville (2011) 306: Hundreds of roaches crawled across the ceiling [...] We were all so skeeved that [...] we escorted Felix and his old lady out in record time.
[US]T. Robinson Rough Trade [ebook] Seeing the two side by side skeeved me out more than I’d have thought possible.
[US](con. 1962) J. Ellroy Enchanters 55: ‘Greenson’s skeeved on her, right? [...] some night [...] he’ll get up his nerve to pounce’.