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单词 smouch
释义

smouchn.1

/smaʊtʃ/
Forms: Also 1700s dialect smeawtch, 1800s smoutch.
Etymology: Compare German schmutz (Middle High German smuz) in the same sense.
Now dialect.
A kiss, a buss.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > kiss > [noun]
kissc1000
bassc1450
baisier1477
swapa1566
buss1567
smouch1578
lip-lick1582
lip-clip1606
tuck1611
accolade1654
poguec1670
osculum1706
slobber1884
banger1898
snog1959
1578 G. Whetstone Promos & Cassandra: 1st Pt. iv. vii. sig. Fj Come smack me, I long for a smouch.
1634 T. Heywood & R. Brome Late Lancashire Witches ii. sig. D3 I'le have one smouch at thy lips.
?1748 ‘T. Bobbin’ View Lancs. Dial. (ed. 2) 29 Le meh ha one Smeawtch ot parting.
a1800 S. Pegge Suppl. Grose's Provinc. Gloss. (1814) Smouch, a kiss. North.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online December 2020).

smouchn.2

/smaʊtʃ/
Forms: Also smoutch.
Etymology: Alteration of smouse n.
Now rare or Obsolete.
1. A Jew.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > sect > Judaism > [noun] > person
Jewa1225
synagogistc1662
sabbatizer1683
smouse1705
smouch1765
sheeny1824
Yahudi1858
Hebraist1879
Hymie1956
SJM1975
1765 C. Johnstone Chrysal III. i. xi. 64 I hate them [sc. the Inquisitors] mortally ever since I saw them roast some poor Smouches at Lisbon because they would not eat pork.
1785 R. Cumberland Observer No. 38. ⁋2 Smoke the Jew!.. Throw him over, says another, hand over the smoutch!
1826 W. Scott Jrnl. 1 Mar. (1939) 118 I took lessons of oil-painting..from a little Jew animalcule—a smouch called Burrell.
1842 R. H. Barham Merchant of Venice in Ingoldsby Legends 2nd Ser. 50 You find fault mit ma pargains, and say I'm a Smouch.
2. South African. An itinerant trader.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > trader > [noun] > itinerant
piepowderc1436
kedger1497
badgera1500
cadger?a1500
chapman?1593
peripateticc1600
haggler1602
higgler1637
mugger1743
truckerc1790
smouch1849
smouse1850
togt-ganger1879
kurveyor1885
smouser1903
machinga1993
1849 E. E. Napier Excursions Southern Afr. II. 391 I dare say..you have heard that I have turned a regular ‘smoutch’, the Colonial term for trader.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

smouchn.3

Obsolete.
(See quot. 1785.)
ΘΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > tea manufacture > [noun] > tree leaves adulterating dry tea
smouch1785
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > forgery, falsification > [noun] > something false or forged > material used in
smouch1785
fake1877
tinned air1913
1785 F. Grose Classical Dict. Vulgar Tongue Smouch, dried leaves of the ash tree, used by the smugglers for adulterating the black, or bohea teas.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online June 2018).

smouchn.4

/smaʊtʃ/
Etymology: ? variant of smutch n. Compare smooch n.1, smooch v.1
A smudge, a dirty mark. The verb smouch ‘to daub, dirty, stain’, is given by Sir G. C. Lewis Gloss. Heref. (1839) at smirch.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > cleanness and dirtiness > dirtiness > dirt > soiled condition > [noun] > dirty mark
smitOE
soil1501
smutch1530
sullya1616
smitch1638
smut1664
smircha1688
moil1818
high-water mark1847
smouch1873
tide-mark1907
1873 R. Broughton Nancy III. 192 A huge smouch of black under each of their eyes.
1882 Harper's Mag. Aug. 379 They keep carefully away from the smouch of the cigarette trays.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online June 2018).

smouchv.1

/smaʊtʃ/
Forms: Also 1500s smowtch, 1500s–1600s smoutch.
Etymology: Compare German dialect schmutzen to kiss, to smile.
intransitive and transitive. To kiss, buss.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > kiss > [verb (intransitive)]
kissc1330
smouch1588
neb1609
moutha1616
to dab nebs?1772
snog1962
the mind > emotion > love > kiss > [verb (transitive)]
kissc900
reachOE
bassc1500
to lay on the lips1530
bussa1566
swap1577
smouch1588
lip1605
bause1607
suaviate1650
to pree a person's mouth1724
accolade1843
to give (someone) onec1882
to give (a person) some sugar1921
steups1967
(a)
1588 E. D. tr. Theocritus Six Idillia A vij Thinkst thou..mee to kisse? I haue no will After the Countrie guise to smouch.
1599 T. Heywood 1st Pt. King Edward IV sig. E3 I had rather then a bend of leather shee and I might smutch togither.
(b)1595 Enq. Tripe-wife (1881) 165 Kisse and smowtch the Widdow neuer so much: there is one..must carrie the wench away.1622 M. Drayton 2nd Pt. Poly-olbion xxi. 21 Chill zmouch thee euery morne, before the Sunne can rise.1654 E. Gayton Pleasant Notes Don Quixot iv. ix. 235 The Knights..did so smouch them, that the lippe-frolicks were heard into the Kitchin.1811 Countess Granville Lett. (1894) I. 21 The little hideous Duc de Berri smouches us all.a1825– in dial. glossaries (E. Anglia, Lanc., Cheshire, etc.)

Derivatives

ˈsmoucher n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > kiss > [noun] > one who gives kisses
kisser1537
basser1552
smoucher1611
snogger1965
1611 R. Cotgrave Dict. French & Eng. Tongues Baiseur, a kisser, smoutcher, smacker.
ˈsmouching n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > love > kiss > [noun] > action of kissing
kissinga1300
bassing1546
lip-labour1582
bussing1583
smouching1583
slavering1607
lip-work1631
suaviation1656
deosculation1658
osculation1658
bussa1721
basiation1879
kissage1886
mugging1890
oscularity1926
snogging1945
smash-mouth1965
1583 P. Stubbes Anat. Abuses sig. Mviiiv What kissing and bussing, what smouching & slabbering one of another.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online December 2020).

smouchv.2

/smaʊtʃ/
Forms: Also smoutch.
Etymology: ? < smouch n.2
Now U.S.
1. transitive. To acquire dishonestly; to pilfer.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > petty theft or pilfering > pilfer [verb (transitive)]
mitcha1393
pelfa1400
purloinc1475
prowl?1529
finger1530
pilfer1532
lurchc1565
filch1567
filch1574
proloyne1581
nim1606
hook1615
truff1718
snaffle1725
crib1735
pettifog1759
magg1762
niffle1785
cabbage1793
weed1811
nibble1819
cab1825
smouch1826
snuga1859
mooch1862
attract1891
souvenir1897
rat1906
snipe1909
promote1918
salvage1918
smooch1941
1826 W. Cobbett Rural Rides in Cobbett's Weekly Polit. Reg. 14 Oct. 135 The far greater part of them are..getting, or expecting, loaves and fishes... They smouch, or want to smouch, some of the taxes.
1880 ‘M. Twain’ Tramp Abroad xxx. 289 Odds and ends smouched from half-a-dozen learned tongues.
1888 New Princeton Rev. 5 49 The rest of it was smouched from House's Atlantic paper.
2. intransitive. To deal unfairly or dishonestly.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > wrongdoing > dishonesty > [verb (intransitive)]
cross1823
smouch1848
society > morality > moral evil > lack of principle or integrity > be unprincipled [verb (intransitive)] > act dishonestly
smouch1848
graft1859
grift1926
to pull a stroke1970
1848 J. R. Bartlett Dict. Americanisms To Smoutch, to gouge; to take unfair advantage.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online December 2020).
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更新时间:2025/3/1 8:49:42