smile
pronunciation
How to pronounce smile in British English: UK [smaɪl]
How to pronounce smile in American English: US [smaɪl]
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- Noun:
- a facial expression characterized by turning up the corners of the mouth; usually shows pleasure or amusement
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- Verb:
- change one's facial expression by spreading the lips, often to signal pleasure
- express with a smile
Word Origin
- smile
- smile: [13] The Old English word for ‘smile’ was smearcian, ancestor of modern English smirk. This was descended ultimately from the Indo- European base *smei-, which also produced Greek meidos ‘laugh’, Sanskrit smeras ‘smiling’, Latvian smaidīt ‘smile’, and Russian smejat’ sja ‘laugh’. Smile, which from the 13th century began to push smirk towards the more specialized sense ‘smile in a self-satisfied way’, comes from the same base, and was probably borrowed from a Scandinavian source (Swedish has smila and Danish smile).=> smirk
- smile (v.)
- c. 1300, perhaps from Middle Low German *smilen or a Scandinavian source (such as Danish smile "smile," Swedish smila "smile, smirk, simper, fawn"), from Proto-Germanic *smil-, extended form of PIE root *smei- "to laugh, smile" (cognates: Old English smerian "to laugh at, scorn," Old High German smieron "to smile," Latin mirus "wonderful," mirari "to wonder"). Related: Smiled; smiling. Gradually pushed the usual Old English word, smearcian (modern smirk), into a specific, unpleasant sense. Of the eyes, from 1759. Figuratively, as indicating favor or encouragement, from c. 1400. Romance, Celtic, and Slavic languages tend to use a diminutive of the word for "laugh" to mean "smile" (such as Latin ridere "laugh;" subridere "smile"), perhaps literally "small laugh" or "low laugh."
- smile (n.)
- 1560s, from smile (v.).
Antonym
Example
- 1. Smile at someone you don 't know .
- 2. Did he smile his work to see ?
- 3. Gradually a smile appeared on her face .
- 4. No matter what the situation , they just smile .
- 5. She orders a mint tea , flashing another smile .