From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English smothe , smethe , from Old English smēþe , smōþ , both from Proto-West Germanic *smanþī , of unknown origin. Cognate with Scots smuith ( “ smooth ” ) , Saterland Frisian smoud ( “ smooth ” ) , Low German smood and smödig ( “ smooth, malleable, ductile ” ) , Dutch smeuïg ( “ smooth ” ) (from earlier smeudig ).
IPA (key ) : /smuːð/
Audio ( US ) : Duration: 1 second. 0:01 (file )
Audio: Duration: 1 second. 0:01 (file )
Rhymes: -uːð
smooth (comparative smoother , superlative smoothest )
Having a texture that lacks friction . Not rough .
quotations ▼ 1695 , C[harles] A[lphonse] du Fresnoy , translated by John Dryden , De Arte Graphica. The Art of Painting, [ … ] , London: [ … ] J[ ohn] Heptinstall for W. Rogers, [ … ] , →OCLC :The outlines must be smooth , [ …] imperceptible to the touch, and even, without eminence or cavities.
1907 August, Robert W[illiam] Chambers , chapter IX, in The Younger Set , New York, N.Y.: D. Appleton & Company , →OCLC :“A tight little craft,” was Austin’s invariable comment on the matron; and she looked it, always trim and trig and smooth of surface like a converted yacht cleared for action. ¶ Near her wandered her husband, orientally bland, invariably affable, [ …] .
2005 , Lesley Brown, Sophist , translation of original by Plato , page 229e :Teaching that’s done by talking seems to have one rough path and another part which is smoother .
Without difficulty , problems , or unexpected consequences or incidents.
quotations ▼ We hope for a smooth transition to the new system.
2011 , Phil McNulty, “Euro 2012: Montenegro 2-2 England”, in BBC [1] :England's path to Poland and Ukraine next summer looked to be a smooth one as goals from Ashley Young and Darren Bent gave them a comfortable lead after 31 minutes.
2019 June 19, Elisabeth Malkin and Ana Swanson, “Mexico Ratifies Trade Deal With the U.S. and Canada”, in The New York Times [2] :The path to approval has been bumpiest in Washington, where Democrats in Congress have raised concerns over Mexico’s enforcement of labor rights and environmental law — and smoothest in Mexico, where the president has described the accord as a guarantee of stability for his country’s economy.
Bland ; glib .
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Flowing or uttered without check, obstruction, or hesitation; not harsh; fluent.
quotations ▼ 1670 , John Milton, The History of Britain :the only smooth poet of those times
1737 , [Alexander Pope ], The First Epistle of the Second Book of Horace , Imitated , London: [ … ] T. Cooper, [ … ] , →OCLC , page 16 :VValler vvas ſmooth ; but Dryden taught to join / The varying verſe, the full reſounding line, / The long majetſic march, and energy divine.
Suave ; sophisticated .
quotations ▼ 2003 , T. Lewis Humphrey, The Price of Love , →ISBN , page 279 :He was so smooth and handsome. He knew just what to say and when to say it.
( of an action ) Natural ; unconstrained .
quotations ▼ 2006 , Mary Kay Moskal, Camille Blachowicz, Reading for Fluency , →ISBN , page 3:In order for a reading to be smooth and effortless, readers must be able to recognize and read words accurately, automatically, and quickly.
( of a motion ) Unbroken .
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( chiefly of water ) Placid , calm.
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( of an edge ) Lacking projections or indentations ; not serrated .
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1997 , Christopher Dickey, Innocent Blood: A Novel , →ISBN , page 91 :Out of the handles flipped the smooth blade and the serrated blade, which was dangerously sharp, the flathead screwdrivers, the Phillips screwdriver, the can opener, the awl.
( of food or drink ) Not grainy ; having an even texture.
quotations ▼ 1997 , Lou Seibert Pappas, Sorbets and Ice Creams , →ISBN , page 19 :A compact and stylish design, it produces 1 generous quart of excellent, smooth ice cream in 20 to 25 minutes.
( of a beverage ) Having a pleasantly rounded flavor; neither rough nor astringent .
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( mathematics , of a function) Having derivatives of all finite orders at all points within the function’s domain .
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( mathematics , of a number) That factors completely into small prime numbers .
( linguistics , classical studies , of a vowel) Lacking marked aspiration .
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( of muscles, medicine ) Involuntary and non- striated .
( having a texture lacking friction ) : even
( without difficulty or problems ) : fluid
[Select preferred languages ]
[Clear all ]
Amharic: ለስላሳ ( läslasa )
Arabic: نَاعِم ( nāʕim ) , أَمْلَس ( ʔamlas )
Egyptian Arabic: مالس ( mālis ) , ناعم ( nāʕim )
Armenian: հարթ (hy) ( hartʻ ) , ողորկ (hy) ( oġork )
Aromanian: buimatcu , duzi , ischiu
Asturian: llisu (ast)
Azerbaijani: hamar (az) , rəvan
Belarusian: гла́дкі ( hládki )
Bhojpuri: चिकन ( cikan )
Bulgarian: гла́дък (bg) ( gládǎk )
Burmese: ချော (my) ( hkyau: )
Catalan: llis (ca)
Chamicuro: pya'sino
Chechen: шера ( šera )
Cherokee: ᎤᏩᎾᏕᏍᎩ ( uwanadesgi )
Chinese:
Mandarin: 平滑 (zh) ( pínghuá ) , 光滑 (zh) ( guānghuá, guānghua )
Crimean Tatar: tegiz
Czech: hladký (cs) m
Dalmatian: lois
Danish: glat (da)
Dutch: glad (nl)
Esperanto: glata (eo)
Estonian: sile
Even: булдути ( ʙulduti )
Finnish: sileä (fi)
French: lisse (fr)
Friulian: lis , vualîf
Galician: liso (gl)
Georgian: გლუვი ( gluvi )
German: glatt (de)
Gothic: 𐍃𐌻𐌰𐌹𐌷𐍄𐍃 ( slaihts )
Greek: λείος (el) m ( leíos ) , απαλός (el) m ( apalós )
Ancient: λεῖος ( leîos ) , λισσός ( lissós )
Guaraní: sỹi
Hawaiian: paheʻe ( esp. of skin ) , ʻōmolemole ( of glass, crystal )
Hebrew: חָלָק (he) ( khalak )
Hindi: चिकना (hi) ( ciknā )
Hungarian: sima (hu)
Icelandic: sléttur (is) m
Ido: glata (io)
Indonesian: halus (id) , mulus (id)
Ingrian: lakkia
Ingush: шаьра ( šära )
Irish: caoin , mín
Italian: liscio (it) , mellifluo (it)
Japanese: 滑らかな (ja) ( なめらかな, nameraka na )
Kapampangan: malinatnat
Kashubian: głôdczi
Kazakh: тегіс ( tegıs )
Khiamniungan Naga: tǖlīnglīng
Korean: 매끄럽다 (ko) ( maekkeureopda )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: لووس ( lûs )
Northern Kurdish: lûs (ku) , hilû (ku)
Latgalian: gluds , gludons
Latin: glaber , lēvis (la) , teres
Latvian: gluds
Luxembourgish: glat (lb)
Macedonian: ма́зен ( mázen ) , гла́док ( gládok ) ( dialectal )
Malay: licin (ms)
Maori: māeneene , mōhanihani , newanewa , koutata , mohimohi
Mbyá Guaraní: yxyĩ
Middle English: smethe , smothe
Moksha: вадря ( vadrä )
Mongolian: тэгш (mn) ( tegš ) , гөлгөр (mn) ( gölgör )
Navajo: dilkǫǫh
Northern Sami: livttis
Occitan: lis (oc)
Old Church Slavonic:
Cyrillic: гладъкъ ( gladŭkŭ )
Old English: smēþe
Old Occitan: lis
Persian: لیز (fa) ( liz )
Polish: gładki (pl)
Portuguese: liso (pt)
Romanian: neted (ro) , lin (ro) , lis (ro)
Romansch: glisch
Russian: гла́дкий (ru) ( gládkij )
Scottish Gaelic: mìn , sèimh , socrach , tlàth
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: гла̏дак
Roman: glȁdak (sh)
Sicilian: lisciu (scn)
Slovak: hladký
Slovene: gladek
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: gładki
Upper Sorbian: hładki
Spanish: liso (es) , glaxo ( water surface, Peru ) , terso (es) , suave (es)
Sundanese: lemes (su)
Swahili: laini (sw)
Swedish: jämn (sv) , len (sv) , hal (sv) , slät (sv) , glatt (sv)
Tagalog: makinis
Tahitian: hinuhinu
Tarantino: lisse
Telugu: నున్నటి ( nunnaṭi )
Thai: เรียบ (th) ( rîiap )
Tocharian B: ṣmare
Turkish: pürüzsüz (tr) , düz (tr)
Ukrainian: гладки́й ( hladkýj )
Venetan: guałivo , gałivo
Vietnamese: trơn (vi) , mượt (vi)
Vilamovian: głōt
Volapük: smufik (vo)
Welsh: llyfn (cy) , esmwyth (cy)
White Hmong: du
Yiddish: גלאַט ( glat )
Zealandic: glad
show ▼ ± action: natural; unconstrained
show ▼ ± edge: lacking projections or indentations; not serrated
show ▼ ± food or drink: not grainy; having an even texture
show ▼ ± beverage: having a pleasantly rounded flavor; neither rough nor astringent
show ▼ ± mathematics, of a function: Having derivatives of all finite orders at all points within the function’s domain
show ▼ ± linguistics, classical studies, of a vowel: lacking marked aspiration
smooth (comparative smoother , superlative smoothest )
Smoothly .
quotations ▼ smooth -running , smooth-tongued , smooth-spoken
The paths true love never ran smooth (ly) .
1591 (date written), William Shakespeare , “The Second Part of Henry the Sixt, [ … ] ”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies. [ … ] (First Folio ), London: [ … ] Isaac Iaggard , and Ed[ ward] Blount , published 1623 , →OCLC , [ Act III, scene ii] :Smooth runs the water where the brook is deep.
smooth (plural smooths )
Something that is smooth , or that goes smoothly and easily.
quotations ▼
1860 , Anne Manning, The Day of Small Things [3] , page 81 :Things are often equalized by roughs and smooths being set against one another.
A smoothing action.
quotations ▼ 2006 , Julienne Van Loon, Road Story [4] , →ISBN , page 12 :She brushes down her hair with a little bit of spit and a smooth of her hand and opens the bright green door, walking a few metres, squinting.
A domestic animal having a smooth coat .
quotations ▼ 1916 , William Ernest Castle, Sewall Wright, Studies of Inheritance in Guinea-pigs and Rats [5] , page 104 :In the 4-toe stock there is a wide gap between the lowest rough and the smooths which come from the same parents.
A member of an anti-hippie fashion movement in 1970s Britain.
quotations ▼ 1999 , Peter Childs, Mike Storry, Encyclopedia of Contemporary British Culture [6] , →ISBN , page 188 :By the early 1970s, skinhead culture began to mutate into the variant ‘white ethnic’ styles of the suedeheads and smooths .
( statistics ) The analysis obtained through a smoothing procedure.
quotations ▼ 1990 , Wolfgang Härdle, Applied Nonparametric Regression [7] , →ISBN , page 17 :A smooth of the potato data set has already been given in Figure 1.2.
show ▼ ± something which is smooth or easy
show ▼ ± domestic animal having a smooth coat
show ▼ ± member of an anti-hippie fashion movement in 1970s Britain
show ▼ ± statistics: analysis obtained through a smoothing procedure
smooth (third-person singular simple present smooths , present participle smoothing , simple past and past participle smoothed )
( transitive ) To make smooth or even.
quotations ▼ 1961 , William Gibson, The Miracle Worker [8] , →ISBN , page 37 :She smooths her skirt, looking as composed and ladylike as possible.
synonym ▲ Synonym: smoothen
( transitive ) To reduce to a particular shape or form by pressure ; to press , to flatten .
( transitive ) To make straightforward or easy .
quotations ▼ 2007 , Beth Kohn, Lonely Planet Venezuela , page 379 :Caracas can be a tough place but the tremendously good-natured caraqueños smoothed my passage every step of the way.
( transitive ) To calm or palliate .
to smooth a person's temper
( statistics , image processing, digital audio) To capture important patterns in the data, while leaving out noise.
quotations ▼ 1999 , Murray R. Spiegel, Larry J. Stephens, Schaum’s Outline of Theory and Problems of Statistics [9] , →ISBN , page 457 :[ …] the 7-month moving averages provide better smoothing of the data in this case than do the 3-month moving averages.
( West Country ) To stroke ; especially to stroke an animal's fur.
Can I smooth your cat?
show ▼ ± statistics: capture important patterns in the data, while leaving out noise