smell like a rose

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English

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Verb

smell like a rose (third-person singular simple present smells like a rose, present participle smelling like a rose, simple past and past participle smelt like a rose or smelled like a rose)

  1. (idiomatic, colloquial, simile) To be regarded as appealing, virtuous, or respectable; to be untainted or unharmed.
    • 1953 November 22, “Prison is quiet after hearing”, in Spokesman-Review, Spokane, USA, retrieved 4 August 2009, page 22:
      "I don't suppose anyone from the director down will come out of this deal smelling like a rose," the warden commented, "but our only hope is that some good will result from the hearing."
    • 1990, Marilyn Cannaday, Bigger than Life: The Creator of Doc Savage, →ISBN, page 28:
      But compared to others, Dent came out of the Depression "smelling like a rose." He later boasted that he made $18,000 a year with his writing during the Depression.
    • 2002 June 24, Christopher Palmeri, “Can CalPERS Afford to Throw Stones?”, in BusinessWeek, retrieved 4 Aug. 2009:
      The champion of corporate governance should smell like a rose. Instead, there's an unpleasant whiff of pork-barrel politics rising from the board.

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