Page:An Etymological Dictionary of the German Language.djvu/338

Sch Germany (see ). further vlinder.  ,, ‘to hurl, smash, bray (of trumpets), peal (of thunder),’ smetern, ‘to clatter,’ an onomatopoetic word.  ,, ‘smith,’ from smit,  smid, , ‘worker in metal.’  aiza-smiþa, ‘smith,’  ‘worker in brass,’ and ga-smiþôn, ‘to work (do smith’s work),’ show that the  meaning is specialisation of the signification ‘faber, worker in art’;  smiðr, , ‘worker in metal or wood’;   smiþ,  smith,  smid. ,, based on , is derived from the  smitte,  smitta, , ‘smithy,’ which again comes from  *smiþjo (þj became þþj in West , and the þþ was permutated to tt in ;  );   smiðja,  smiþþe, ,  smithy, and the   smisse. With the root smī̆, ‘to work artistically in hard material — wood, brass,’ preserved in *smi-þa,, are connected  smeidar, ‘artist, artifex daedalus,’ and the words discussed under. also σμΐλη ‘graving tool,’ σμι-νύη, ‘hoe.’ For its connection with other terms see under.  ,, ‘to wind, incline; twine, nestle,’ from  smiegen ( *smiogan is by chance not recorded), ‘to cling close to, contract, stoop’;   smûgan, ‘to creep,’  smjúga, ‘to creep through something’; the  idea of these cognates, which do not occur elsewhere in , is ‘to press closely to anything and to be swayed by its movements.’  root smū̆g, from pre- smū̆k;   smykati sę, ‘to creep,’  smùkti, ‘to slide.’ See  and.  ,, ‘hair-grass, bulrush,’ from the  smilehe, smëlehe, ;  *smëlaha, smilaha, or rather smëlawa, smilawa, and  *smilhwi, , are wanting; allied to  smëlhe, , ‘narrow.’   ,, ‘bribes,’ only, formed like  (trifles), with a foreign suffix from a  stem;  also. Allied to, smirn, smirwen, ‘to smear, salve, bribe,’  smirwen, a denominative of.   ,, ‘paint (for the face), rouge,’ from the  sminke,  smicke, , allied to  smëcchar, smëhhar,  ‘fine, pretty,’  smicere, ‘fine, pretty.’ These are connected with  (root smaikw?). smigre, smickra, ‘to flatter,’  to smicker, ‘to ogle.’   ,, ‘blow, stroke, trick,’ only, allied to  smiz, ‘spot’ (smîȥen, ‘to strike’).  ,, ‘to lash, whip,’ from smitzen, ‘to beat with rods, scourge, besmear.’ To this is allied   ‘wily, cunning,’  ‘beaten away.’  ,, only,  ‘smoker,’ then ‘book strongly scenting of tobacco’; allied to  smöken; see.  ,, ‘to pout, be sulky,’ from smollen, ‘to be silent from vexation, pout.’ also ‘to smile’; a late form of  smielen, ‘to smile’; see.  ,, ‘good-fellowship, fraternisation,’ only; its history is obscure, yet it seems to be connected with  smullen, ‘to feast, gormandize’ (see ), smul, ‘feast, good cheer.’ <section end="Schmollis" /> ,, ‘to swelter, stew, fry,’ only, formed from  and  smoren, ‘to roast, stew,’ also ‘to stifle, fume’;   smorian, ‘to stifle.’ Those who regard ‘to roast, stew,’ as the  meaning of the cognates may trace  smorian to  smuzôn, and explain   from some such  sense as ‘cook-shop.’ Yet  and  smorþer, ‘steam,’  smother, probably points to a root with a final r. <section begin="Schmuck" /> ,, ‘adornment, finery,’ only, in  gesmuc, ‘adornment, embellishment,’ allied to ,  smücken, ‘to wind, press close, dress, adorn.’ The  root smug (pre- smuk) in , of which  is an intensive form, was frequently used  to form words signifying ‘to dress,’ and is also found in the name of a sort of under-garment or shirt,  smoccho,  smocc (  smock). The, ‘tidy, smart,’  only, is derived from  ( North  smok), whence also  smug (or from  smuk). <section end="Schmuck" /> ,, ‘to smuggle,’ only, formed from the   smuggeln;   smokkeln,  to smuggle (borrowed from the same source?). The word is connected with the root smug,