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Etymology
From Middle High German smecken (“to try by tasting; savour, smell, scent; perceive”), Old High German smecchen (“to taste”), Lua error in Module:links at line 380: The specified language Proto-Germanic is unattested, while the given term does not begin with '*' to indicate that it is reconstructed.. Cognate with Old English smæc (“taste”), Dutch smaak, English smack, Lithuanian smagùs (“agreeable”). |
From Proto-Germanic *smakkijaną (“to taste”), from *Proto-Germanic *smakkuz (“a taste”), from Proto-Indo-European *smegʰ-, *smeg- (“to taste”). Compare English smack and smatch, as well as Lithuanian smagù (“cheerful, enjoyable, pleasant”).
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Etymology
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Etymology
From Middle High German smīzen (“to rub, strike”). Cognate with Old English smītan, Dutch smijten (“to sling, throw”), English to smite, Gothic (smeitan, “to spread over, besmear”). |
From Middle High German smīzen, from Old High German smīzan, from Proto-Germanic *smītaną, from Proto-Indo-European *smeyd-. Cognate with Dutch smijten, Low German smieten, English smite, Danish smide, Gothic 𐌱𐌹𐍃𐌼𐌴𐌹𐍄𐌰𐌽 (bismeitan).
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Etymology
From Middle High German smëlzen, Old High German smëlzan. Cognate with English to smelt, French émail (“enamel”), Ancient Greek μέλδω (méldō, “to melt”), Italian smalto. |
From Old High German smelzan, from Proto-Germanic *smeltaną; akin to Old Saxon smeltan. Cognate with English smelt, Danish smelte, Dutch smelten, German Low German smölten. Through the meaning of soften: compare Old Church Slavonic младъ (mladŭ) (whence младость (mladostĭ, “softness”)), Latin mollis (“soft”).
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Etymology
From Middle High German smërz, Old High German smërzo. Cognate with Middle English smerte, Old English smeortan (“to pain, smart”), English smart, Ancient Greek σμερδνός (smerdnós, “horrible'; the Aryan root smerd, Teut. smert, signifies perhaps ‘to stick, bite”), Latin mordēre (“to bite”). |
From Middle High German smerze f, m, from Old High German smerza f, smerzo m, from Proto-Germanic. Cognate with Dutch smart, English smart.
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