smacker
nounEtymology
From smack + -er. In reference to lips, from the sound of a loud kiss. In reference to money, cf. ackers (influenced in part by the smacking sound that is sometimes produced when cash is transferred from the hand of one person to the hand of another, or placed onto a hard surface such as a table or counter).
- inherited from smaken
- derived from *smegʰ-,*smeg-✻
- inherited from *smakku✻
- inherited from smæc,smæċċ
- inherited from smac,smak,smacke
Definitions
One who smacks or spanks.
- It makes no difference whether the SMC is the smacker or the smackee. Does the SMC talk about physical violence in a matter-of-fact way? This isn't passion; it is evidence of sickness.
One who makes a smacking noise, especially while eating.
A loud kiss.
- She planted me with a smacker so scorchy it singed my socks.
›+ 2 more definitionsshow fewer
(chiefly in the plural) A lip.
- Who can doubt then, that ANACREON'S beauty was furnished with a pair of such exquisite smackers.
(chiefly in the plural)
(chiefly in the plural): A unit of currency, especially a dollar or pound.
The neighborhood
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for smacker. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA