smell
— Verb
– English
~ become aware of not through the senses but instinctively; "I sense his hostility"; "I smell trouble"; "smell out corruption"
smell
— Verb
– English
~ smell bad; "He rarely washes, and he smells"
smell out
— Verb
– English
~ recognize or detect by or as if by smelling; "He can smell out trouble"
smelt
— Verb
– English
~ extract (metals) by heating
smile
— Verb
– English
~ change one's facial expression by spreading the lips, often to signal pleasure
smile
— Verb
– English
~ express with a smile; "She smiled her thanks"
smirch
— Verb
– English
~ charge falsely or with malicious intent; attack the good name and reputation of someone; "The journalists have defamed me!"; "The article in the paper sullied my reputation"
smirch
— Verb
– English
~ smear so as to make dirty or stained
smirk
— Verb
– English
~ smile affectedly or derisively
smite
— Verb
– English
~ inflict a heavy blow on, with the hand, a tool, or a weapon
smite
— Verb
– English
~ cause physical pain or suffering in; "afflict with the plague"
smite
— Verb
– English
~ affect suddenly with deep feeling; "He was smitten with love for this young girl"
smock
— Verb
– English
~ embellish by sewing in straight lines crossing each other diagonally; "The folk dancers wore smocked shirts"
smoke
— Verb
– English
~ inhale and exhale smoke from cigarettes, cigars, pipes; "We never smoked marijuana"; "Do you smoke?"
smoke out
— Verb
– English
~ drive out with smoke; "smoke out the bees"
smoke
— Verb
– English
~ emit a cloud of fine particles; "The chimney was fuming"
chain-smoke
— Verb
– English
~ smoke one cigarette after another; light one cigarette from the preceding one
smolder
— Verb
– English
~ burn slowly and without a flame; "a smoldering fire"
smolder
— Verb
– English
~ have strong suppressed feelings
smooch
— Verb
– English
~ snuggle and lie in a position where one person faces the back of the others