different between slicker vs smicker

slicker

English

Pronunciation

  • Rhymes: -?k?(?)

Etymology 1

From the adjective slick.

Adjective

slicker

  1. comparative form of slick: more slick

Etymology 2

From slick (to smooth or make slick) +? -er.

Noun

slicker (plural slickers)

  1. One who or that which slicks.
  2. (originally Canada, US) A waterproof coat or jacket.
  3. A person who is perceived as clever, urbane and possibly disreputable. (abbreviation of city slicker.)
  4. (slang) A swindler or conman.
  5. A symmetrical knife with a handle at each end, used for burnishing leather.
  6. (metalworking) A curved tool for smoothing the surfaces of a mould after the withdrawal of the pattern.
  7. A two-handled tool for finishing concrete or mortar; a darby.
  8. A brush for grooming a cat and removing loose fur.
    • 2009, Vicky Halls, The Complete Cat (page 225)
      There are numerous grooming products on the market, particularly for longhaired cats – for example, rakes, slickers and detangle sprays, many of which claim to make grooming as simple and safe as possible.
Synonyms
  • (waterproof coat or jacket): poncho

Verb

slicker (third-person singular simple present slickers, present participle slickering, simple past and past participle slickered)

  1. To slither, as on a slick surface.
  2. To con or hoodwink.
  3. To use a slicker on.
  4. To smooth or slick.
  5. To spread mashed manure on fields as a form of fertilization.

See also

  • city slicker

Anagrams

  • Rickels, Sickler, lickers, relicks, rickles, sickler

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smicker

English

Etymology

From Middle English smiker, from Old English smicer, smicor (beauteous, beautiful, elegant, fair, fine, neat, tasteful), from Proto-Germanic *smikraz (fine, elegant, delicate, tender), from Proto-Indo-European *sm?yg- (small, delicate), from Proto-Indo-European *sm?-, *smey- (to smear, stroke, wipe, rub). Cognate with Middle High German smecker (neat, elegant), Ancient Greek ??????? (smikrós), ?????? (mikrós, small, short), Lithuanian smeigti (to lunge, thrust, jab), Latin m?ca (crumb, morsel, bit).

For the verb, compare Swedish smickra (to flatter, coax, wheedle, butter up), Danish smigre (to flatter).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?sm?k?(?)/

Adjective

smicker (comparative more smicker, superlative most smicker)

  1. Elegant; fine; gay.
    • 1606, John Ford, Fame's Memorial
      No, his deep-reaching spirit could not brook
      The fond addiction to such vanity;
      Regardful of his honour he forsook
      The smicker use of court-humanity.
  2. Amorous; wanton.
  3. Spruce; smart.
    • 1590, Thomas Lodge, "Corydon’s Song", in Rosalynde
      A smicker boy, a lither swain,
      Heigh ho, a smicker swain,
      That his love was wanton fain, []

Verb

smicker (third-person singular simple present smickers, present participle smickering, simple past and past participle smickered)

  1. (intransitive) To look amorously or wantonly

Derived terms

  • smickering
  • smickly

Anagrams

  • Emricks, Remicks

smicker From the web:

  • what does snicker mean
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