smouch
English
Etymology 1
Variant of smooch.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /smuːt͡ʃ/
Audio (Hampshire, England) (file)
Verb
smouch (third-person singular simple present smouches, present participle smouching, simple past and past participle smouched)
Etymology 2
Probably a variant of smutch.
Noun
smouch (plural smouches)
- Alternative form of smutch (“a stain or smudge”)
- 1866, Henry Ward Beecher, 595 Pulpit Pungencies, page 263:
- Suppose an artist, after having completed such a picture, in a moment of intoxication, goes into his studio, takes his brush, dips it into black paint, and applies it thereto. Only one smouch and the work of months is destroyed!
- 1896, Cairns Collection of American Women Writers, Harper's new monthly magazine, Volume 93, page 618,
- […] and on her breast a baby, wet as she, smiling and cooing, but with a great crimson smouch on its tiny shoulder.
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Verb
smouch (third-person singular simple present smouches, present participle smouching, simple past and past participle smouched)
Etymology 3
Perhaps compare mooch.
Verb
smouch (third-person singular simple present smouches, present participle smouching, simple past and past participle smouched)
- To take dishonestly or unfairly, to steal from or cheat out of.
- {{RQ:Twain Huckleberry Finn|chapter=[[s:The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884)/Chapter 35|Chapter XXXV|passage= […] So I'll mosey along now, and smouch a couple of case-knives."
"Smouch three," he says; "we want one to make a saw out of."}}
- {{RQ:Twain Huckleberry Finn|chapter=[[s:The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884)/Chapter 35|Chapter XXXV|passage= […] So I'll mosey along now, and smouch a couple of case-knives."
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