smut
English
Etymology
From Middle English smutten (“to defile, debase”), related to German Schmutz (“filth, dirt, smut”) and schmutzen (“to make dirty, stain”).
Compare also Old English smitta (“smear; blot; mark; stain; pollution”), Old English besmītan (“to besmut; defile; dirty; pollute; contaminate”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /smʌt/
Noun
smut (countable and uncountable, plural smuts)
- (uncountable) Soot.
- (countable) A flake of ash or soot.
- 1989, H. T. Willetts (translator), Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (author), August 1914, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, →ISBN, page 56:
- “You can rely on me!” Varya said, still more earnestly and enthusiastically, still leaning heavily on the counter, noticing briefly and forgetting at once that her bare elbow had crushed a stray smut from the Primus mender's booth.
- 2012, Kasey Michaels, A Masquerade in the Moonlight
- “Do I have a smut on my nose, Mr. Donovan? You've been staring at me for a full minute. It's most disconcerting, you know.”
- 1989, H. T. Willetts (translator), Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (author), August 1914, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, →ISBN, page 56:
- (uncountable) Sexually vulgar material; something that is sexual in a dirty way; pornographic material.
- (uncountable) Obscene language; ribaldry; obscenity.
- Addison
- He does not stand upon decency […] but will talk smut, though a priest and his mother be in the room.
- Addison
- (derogatory) A promiscuous woman.
- Any of a range of fungi, mostly Ustilaginomycetes, that cause plant disease in grasses, including cereal crops; the disease so caused.
- (mining) Bad, soft coal containing earthy matter, found in the immediate locality of faults.
Translations
soot — see soot
sexually vulgar or pornographic material
|
promiscuous woman — see slut
Verb
smut (third-person singular simple present smuts, present participle smutting, simple past and past participle smutted)
- (transitive, intransitive) To stain (or be stained) with soot or other dirt.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Mortimer to this entry?)
- (transitive) To taint (grain, etc.) with the smut fungus.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Francis Bacon to this entry?)
- (intransitive) To become tainted by the smut fungus.
- 1836, New England Farmer (volume 14, page 313)
- It smutted to a far greater degree than the year before, say three fourths, or more. I obtained but little more than the seed sown, and that was handsome wheat. This failure I imputed to the same supposed cause which operated the last year.
- 1836, New England Farmer (volume 14, page 313)
- (transitive) To clear of the smut fungus.
- to smut grain for the mill
Irish
Noun
smut m (genitive singular smuit, nominative plural smuit)
Declension
Declension of smut
First declension
Bare forms:
|
Forms with the definite article:
|
Synonyms
- (rostrum): rostram
Derived terms
- smutach, smutúil (“stumpy; curtailed, short; snouty; pug-nosed; sulky”, adjective)
- smutaireacht f (“(act of) sulking”)
- smután m (“stump; chunk of wood”)
- smutmhadra m (“pug-dog”)
Verb
smut (present analytic smutann, future analytic smutfaidh, verbal noun smutadh, past participle smuta)
Conjugation
First Conjugation (A)
singular | plural | relative | autonomous | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
first | second | third | first | second | third | ||||
indicative | present | smutaim | smutann tú; smutair† |
smutann sé, sí | smutaimid | smutann sibh | smutann siad; smutaid† |
a smutann; a smutas | smutar |
past | smut mé; smutas | smut tú; smutais | smut sé, sí | smutamar; smut muid | smut sibh; smutabhair | smut siad; smutadar | a smut / ar smut* |
smutadh | |
past habitual | smutainn | smutá | smutadh sé, sí | smutaimis; smutadh muid | smutadh sibh | smutaidís; smutadh siad | a smutadh / a smutadh* |
smutaí | |
future | smutfaidh mé; smutfad |
smutfaidh tú; smutfair† |
smutfaidh sé, sí | smutfaimid; smutfaidh muid |
smutfaidh sibh | smutfaidh siad; smutfaid† |
a smutfaidh; a smutfas | smutfar | |
conditional | smutfainn | smutfá | smutfadh sé, sí | smutfaimis; smutfadh muid | smutfadh sibh | smutfaidís; smutfadh siad | a smutfadh / a smutfadh* |
smutfaí | |
subjunctive | present | go smuta mé; go smutad† |
go smuta tú; go smutair† |
go smuta sé, sí | go smutaimid; go smuta muid |
go smuta sibh | go smuta siad; go smutaid† |
— | go smutar |
past | dá smutainn | dá smutá | dá smutadh sé, sí | dá smutaimis; dá smutadh muid |
dá smutadh sibh | dá smutaidís; dá smutadh siad |
— | dá smutaí | |
imperative | smutaim | smut | smutadh sé, sí | smutaimis | smutaigí; smutaidh† |
smutaidís | — | smutar | |
verbal noun | smutadh | ||||||||
past participle | smuta |
* Indirect relative
† Archaic or dialect form
References
- "smut" in Foclóir Gaeilge-Béarla, An Gúm, 1977, by Niall Ó Dónaill.
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