TOO ....
smooth (v.) late O.E. smeþan, smeþian "to become smooth," from the source of smooth (adj.). Meaning "to make smooth" is c.1200. Related: Smoothed; smoothing.smooth (adj.) O.E. smoð "free from roughness, not harsh," of unknown origin. Sense of "pleasant, polite, sincere" first recorded late 14c. Slang meaning "superior, classy, clever" is attested from 1893. Smooth-bore in reference to guns is from 1812. smooth talk (v.) is recorded from 1950. A 1599 dictionary has smoothboots "a flatterer, a faire spoken man, a cunning tongued fellow." The usual O.E. form was smeðe, and there is a dialectal smeeth found in places names, e.g. Smithfield, Smedley. smoothie (n.) 1929, "suave person," from smooth + -ie. As a type of blender drink, by 1983.slight (adj.) early 14c., "flat, smooth; hairless," from a Scandinavian source akin to O.N. slettr "smooth, sleek," from P.Gmc. *slikhtaz (cf. O.S. slicht; Low Ger. slicht "smooth, plain common;" O.E. -sliht "level," attested in eorðslihtes "level with the ground;" O.Fris. sliucht, M.Du. sleht, O.H.G. sleht, Goth. slaihts "smooth"), probably from a collateral form of PIE root *sleig- "to smooth, glide."
& SLick
TOO
U LOOK THAT ONE UP ....
VIDEO
VIDEO
No comments:
Post a Comment
.