different between sticker vs smicker

sticker

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?st?k?(r)/
  • Rhymes: -?k?(r)

Etymology 1

stick (to pierce, to be fastened, to adhere) +? -er (agent)

Noun

sticker (plural stickers)

  1. Something or someone that sticks (pierces, or adheres).
    • 1918, Decisions of the Courts of Pennsylvania (Supreme, Superior and Common Pleas), in Workmen's Compensation Cases, page 158:
      [] and I said to Mr. McCauley, whatever is the matter with your neck, it is all swelled up, and he said he got it in the mill; he said he had an arm load of wool and a sticker stuck him in the neck, here (indicating the right hand side of the neck just below the jaw).
    • 1982, Fernando Alegria, Fernando Alegría, Chilean Writers in Exile: Eight Short Novels
      The prisoner fell flat on his face. They dragged him again, this time towards the grove of calafates. They lifted him up there and they threw him in the middle of the bushes. The boy screamed. Thousands of stickers pierced into his flesh.
    • 2010, Valerie Estelle Frankel, From Girl to Goddess: The Heroine's Journey through Myth and Legend, McFarland (?ISBN), page 212:
      When the prickly pear stickers pierced their paws they howled with pain, but they kept running. Sinopa, who hated the fighting, had followed her brothers. She shot a magic arrow over their heads, which pushed the brothers to safety, []
    • 2013, Cathy McDavid, Cowboy for Keeps, Harlequin (?ISBN), page 118:
      He toppled backward, landing on a particularly large cholla and crying out as hundreds of stickers pierced his flesh.
  2. One who sticks to something, or does not give up; a stayer.
    • 1930, The Strand Magazine (volume 80, page 321)
      He's a sticker. He was a goer to the end in all he did — and in Rugger outstandingly []
  3. An adhesive label or decal.
  4. A price tag.
  5. (by extension) The listed price (also sticker price).
  6. (Internet) A cartoonish illustration of a character that represents an emotion or action, often accompanied by text, that may be superimposed on a digital image.
  7. (informal) A burr or seed pod that catches in fur or clothing.
  8. (colloquial, dated) That which causes one to stick; that which puzzles or poses.
    • "That's what I call a sticker for Wagg!"
  9. A wooden strip placed between courses of lumber to allow air circulation (also kiln sticker).
  10. (music) A small wooden rod in an organ which connects (in part) a key and a pallet, so as to communicate motion by pushing.
  11. A brand, label, or company, especially one making and distributing records.
  12. (US, politics) A paster.
Derived terms
  • stickery
  • Tipper sticker
Translations
References
  • sticker in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • sticker in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • “sticker” in Moby Thesaurus II, Grady Ward, 1996.

Verb

sticker (third-person singular simple present stickers, present participle stickering, simple past and past participle stickered)

  1. To apply one or more stickers to (something)
  2. To mark as the sticker price

Etymology 2

stick (sticky, adjective) +? -er (comparative)

Adjective

sticker

  1. (nonstandard, informal) comparative form of stick: more stick (stickier).
    A sticker type of glue that always stays sticky.

Anagrams

  • restick, rickets, tickers

Dutch

Etymology

Borrowed from English sticker.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?st?.k?r/
  • Rhymes: -?k?r
  • Hyphenation: stic?ker

Noun

sticker m (plural stickers, diminutive stickertje n)

  1. sticker (adhesive decal)
    Synonym: plakplaatje

Derived terms

  • bumpersticker
  • prijssticker
  • stickeralbum
  • stickerboek
  • stickervel
  • waarschuwingssticker

Hunsrik

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??tik?/

Adverb

sticker

  1. about, approximately

Further reading

  • Online Hunsrik Dictionary

Spanish

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /es?tike?/, [es?t?i.ke?]

Noun

sticker m (plural stickers or sticker)

  1. sticker

Swedish

Verb

sticker

  1. present tense of sticka.

sticker From the web:

  • what sticker paper to use for cricut
  • what stickers are waterproof
  • what stickers to use on wine glasses
  • what sticker paper does redbubble use
  • what stickers to put on laptop
  • what sticker paper is waterproof
  • what stickers to put on hydro flask
  • what stickers go on car windshield


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
  • what means smicker
  • what is the meaning of snicker
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like