Insert your left needle tip into the stitch to be slipped, and pull it over the last stitch made and off the tip of the right needle
Pass slipped stitch over. E.g. SK2P = Slip one stitch, K2tog, pass slipped stitch over the stitch just worked. -- thus decreasing by 2 stitches.
psso means pass slipped stitch over.
SKPO stands for slip knit pass over. In other words, you slip one stitch, knit one stitch, then pass the slip stitch over the knitted stitch, thus decreasing one stitch in your row of knitting.
SKP aka sl1, k1, psso(Slip Knit Pass) or (Slip One, Knit One, Pass the Slipped Stitch Over)
The typical abbreviation is psso and it stands for "Pass the slip stitch over".This stitch is used to decrease and is usually part of the stitch abbreviation SKP, which stands for "slide 1, knit 1, psso"To do this decrease, you want to take your right needle and insert it into the stitch on your left needle and move the stitch to your right needle. So you have just slipped the stitch from one needle to the other, without knitting or purling it.Now you want to knit the next stitch.Then take the slipped stitch and pull it over the knit stitch. This is passing the slipped stitch over the knit stitch, which means that you have 1 less stitch than you did before.
Slip one stitch (from the left needle to the right), knit the next 2 stitches together, than pass the slipped stitch over the finished K2tog stitch.
Wrap Yarn over (yo) right needle; to slip as if to purl, insert right needle under next stitch from the top (rather than the bottom), slipping stitch back to the right needle; Knit 1 stitch (next stitch); psso is pass slipped stitch over the stitch you just knit.
Pass 2 slipped stitches over.
In knitting, sl1 means to slip one stitch. To do this simply slip the stitch from the left hand needle to the right without knitting it. Stitches can either be slipped purlwise or knitwise. If slipped purlwise, the stitch will not twist but if slipped knitwise it will twist. Therefore, if the pattern does not specify which way to slip the stitch, it is best to slip purlwise. See the related link for a diagram showing how to slip stitches.
You bind off. This is done by knitting two stitches so you have two on the right needle. Then pass the first stitch over the second and off the needle, leaving one on the right needle. Knit another stitch, which puts a second stitch on the right needle. Again pass the first stitch over the second. Continue this all the way down the row.
you must do what is known as a bind off or cast off ( same thing) you start by knitting the first two stitches as you have been knitting .. then using your left needle insert it into the first stitch you just knitted and pass it over the second stitch you just knitted .. you should have just one stitch again on the right needle .. now knit the next stitch and once again using the left needle pass the one stitch over the other .. continue one at a time knitting one stitch .. passing over.. knitting one stitch passing over till all but one stitch remains.. place yarn over the needle and pull thru remaining stitch .. pull to tighten ..
K-O in knitting means "Knit Over" or, in other words, pass one knit stitch over the next.