English-Thai Dictionary
smite
VI ตี อย่างแรง (คำ โบรา ณ ฟาด ทุบ hit strike knock cuff buffet slap te-yang-rang
smite
VT ตี อย่างแรง (คำ โบรา ณ ฟาด ทุบ hit strike knock cuff buffet slap te-yang-rang
smite
VT ทำให้ เจ็บ แปลบ ทำให้ เจ็บปวด ทำให้ ทุกข์ใจ affect plague scourge comfort tam-hai-jeb-peab
smite on
PHRV ตี ตบ ฟัน te
smite upon
PHRV ตี ตบ ฟัน knock at te
smite with
PHRV ได้รับ ผลกระทบ ของ (ทันที เกิดขึ้น ฉับพลัน dai-rab-pon-kra-tob
smith
N ช่างเหล็ก chang-lek
smithereens
N เศษ เล็กน้อย sed-lak-noi
smithery
N งาน ช่างเหล็ก ngan-chang-lak
smithy
N โรง ตี เหล็ก rong-te-lak
smitten
VI กริยา ช่อง ที่ 3 ของ smite kri-ya-chong-ti-3-kong
smitten
VT กริยา ช่อง ที่ 3 ของ smite kri-ya-chong-ti-3-kong
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
SMIT
sometimes used for smitten. [See Smite. ]
SMITE
v.t. pret.smote; pp. smitten, smil. [This verb is the L. mitto.] 1. To strike; to throw, drive or force against, as the fist or hand, a stone or a weapon; to reach with a blow or a weapon; as, to smite one with the fist; to smite with a rod or with a stone. Whoever shall smite thee on the right cheek, turn to him the other also. Matthew 5:39.
2. To kill; to destroy the life of by beating or by weapons of any kind; as, to smite one with the sword, or with an arrow or other engine. David smote Goliath with a sling and a stone. The Philistines were often smitten with great slaughter. [This word, like slay, usually or always signification, that of beating, striking, the primitive mode of killing. We never apply it to the destruction of life by poison, by accident or by legal execution. ]
3. To blast; to destroy life; as by a stroke or by something sent. The flax and the barley were smitten. Exodus 9:31.
4. To afflict; to chasten; to punish. Let us not mistake God's goodness, nor imagine, because he smites us, that we are forsaken by him.
5. To strike or affect with passion. See what the charms that smite the simple heart. Smit with the love of sister arts we came.
To smite with the tongue, to reproach or upbraid. Jeremiah 18:18.
SMITE
v.i.To strike; to collide. The heart melteth and the kness smite together. Nahum 2:1 .
SMITE
n.A blow.
SMITER
n.One who smites or strikes. I gave my back to the smiters. Isaiah 5 :6.
SMITH
n. 1. Literally, the striker, the beater; hence, one who forges with the hammer; one who works in metals; as an iron-smith; gold-smith; silver-smith, etc. Nor yet the smith hath learn'd to form a sword.
2. He that makes or effects any thing.
Hence the name Smith, which, from the number of workmen employed in working metals in early ages, is supposed to be more common than any other.
SMITH
v.t.To beat into shape; to forge. [Not in use. ]
SMITHCRAFT
n.[smith and craft. ] The art of occupation of a smith. [Little used. ]
SMITHERY
n. 1. The worshop of a smith.
2. Work done by a smith.
SMITHING
n.The act or art of working a mass of iron into the intended shape.
SMITHY
n.The shop of a smith. [I believe never used. ]
SMITT
n.The finest of the clayey ore made up into balls, used for marking sheep.
SMITTEN
pp. of smite, smit'n. 1. Struck; killed.
2. Affected with some passion; excited by beauty or someting impressive.
SMITTLE
v.t.[from smite. ] To infect.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
SMIT
SMIT Smit, rare
Defn: imp. & p. p. of Smite. Spenser. Smit with the beauty of so fair a scene. Cowper.
SMIT
SMIT Smit, obs.
Defn: 3d. pers. sing. pres. of Smite. Chaucer.
SMITE
Smite, v. t. [imp. Smoth, rarely Smit (; p. p. Smitten, rarely Smit, or Smote; p. pr. & vb. n. Smiting.] Etym: [AS. smitan to smite, to soil, pollute; akin to OFries. smita to smite, LG. smiten, D. smijten, G. schmeissen, OHG. smizan to smear, stroke, OSw. & dial. Sw. smita to smite, Dan. smiide to throw, Goth. bismeitan, to anoint, besmear; cf. Skr. m to be fat. The original sense seems to have been, to daub on, to smear. Cf. Smut. ]
1. To strike; to inflict a blow upon with the hand, or with any instrument held in the hand, or with a missile thrown by the hand; as, to smite with the fist, with a rod, sword, spear, or stone. Whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. Matt. v. 39. And David. .. took thence a stone, and slang it, and smote the Philistine in his forehead. 1 Sam. xvii. 49.
2. To cause to strike; to use as an instrument in striking or hurling. Profpesy, and smite thine hands together. Ezek. xxi. 14. Saul. .. smote the javelin into the wall. 1 Sam. xix. 1 .
3. To destroy the life of by beating, or by weapons of any kind; to slay by a blow; to kill; as, to smite one with the sword, or with an arrow or other instrument.
4. To put to rout in battle; to overthrow by war.
5. To blast; to destroy the life or vigor of, as by a stroke or by some visitation. The flax and the barely was smitten. Ex. ix. 31.
6. To afflict; to chasten; to punish. Let us not mistake God's goodness, nor imagine, because he smites us, that we are forsaken by him. Wake.
7. To strike or affect with passion, as love or fear. The charms that smite the simple heart. Pope. Smith with the love of sister arts we came. Pope. To smite off, to cut off. -- To smite out, to knock out, as a tooth. Exod, xxi.27. -- To smite with the tongue, to reproach or upbarid; to revile. [Obs. ] Jer. xviii. 18.
SMITE
SMITE Smite, v. i.
Defn: To strike; to collide; to beat. [Archaic ] The heart meleth, and the knees smite together. Nah. ii. 1 .
SMITE
SMITE Smite, n.
Defn: The act of smiting; a blow.
SMITER
SMITER Smit "er, n.
Defn: One who smites. I give my back to the smiters. Isa. l. 6.
SMITH
Smith, n. Etym: [AS. smi; akin to D. smid, G. schmied, OHG. smid,Icel. smi, Dan. & Sw. smed, Goth. smi (in comp. ); cf. Gr.
1. One who forgess with the hammer; one who works in metals; as, a blacksmith, goldsmith, silversmith, and the like. Piers Plowman. Nor yet the smith hath learned to form a sword. Tate.
2. One who makes or effects anything. [R.] Dryden.
SMITH
Smith, v. t. Etym: [AS. smi. See Smith, n.]
Defn: To beat into shape; to fprge. [Obs. ] Chaucer. What smith that any [weapon ] smitheth. Piers Plowman.
SMITHCRAFT
SMITHCRAFT Smith "craft `, n.
Defn: The art or occupation of a smith; smithing. [R.] Sir W. Raleigh.
SMITHER
SMITHER Smith "er, n.
1. Light, fine rain. [Prov. Eng. ]
2. pl.
Defn: Fragments; atoms; finders. [Prov. Eng. ] Smash the bottle to smithers. Tennyson.
SMITHEREENS
SMITHEREENS Smith `er *eens ", n. pl.
Defn: Fragments; atoms; smithers. [Colloq. ] W. Black.
SMITHERY
SMITHERY Smith "er *y, n.; pl. -ies (.
1. The workshop of a smith; a smithy or stithy.
2. Work done by a smith; smithing. The din of all his smithery may some time or other possibly wake this noble duke. Burke.
SMITHING
SMITHING Smith "ing, n.
Defn: The act or art of working or forging metals, as iron, into any desired shape. Moxon.
SMITHSONIAN
SMITHSONIAN Smith *so "ni *an, a.
Defn: Of or pertaining to the Englishman J.L.M. Smithson, or to the national institution of learning which he endowed at Washington, D.C.; as, the Smithsonian Institution; Smithsonian Reports. -- n.
Defn: The Smithsonian Institution.
SMITHSONITE
Smith "son *ite, n. Etym: [See Smithsonian. ] (Min. )
Defn: Native zinc carbonate. It generally occurs in stalactitic, reniform, or botryoidal shapes, of a white to gray, green, or brown color. See Note under Calamine.
SMITHY
Smith "y, n. Etym: [AS. smi, fr. smi; akin to D. smidse, smids, OHG. smitta, G. schmiede, Icel. smi. See Smith, n.]
Defn: The workshop of a smith, esp. a blacksmith; a smithery; a stithy. [Written also smiddy. ] Under a spreading chestnut tree The village smithy stands. Lonfellow.
SMITT
Smitt, n. Etym: [CF. G. schmitz a stain, schmitzen besmear. See Smite, v. t.]
Defn: Fine clay or ocher made up into balls, used for marking sheep. [Eng. ] Woodsward.
SMITTEN
SMITTEN Smit "ten,
Defn: p. p. of Smite.
SMITTLE
Smit "tle, v. t. Etym: [Freq. fr. OE. smitten to befoul. See Smite, v.t.]
Defn: To infect. [Prov. Eng. ]
SMITTLE
SMITTLE Smit "tle, n.
Defn: Infection. [Pov. Eng. ] Wright.
SMITTLE; SMITTLISH
SMITTLE; SMITTLISH Smit "tle, Smit "tlish, a.
Defn: Infectious; catching. [Scot. & Prov. Eng. ] H. Kingsley.
New American Oxford Dictionary
smit
smit |smit smɪt | archaic past participle of smite.
smite
smite |smīt smaɪt | ▶verb ( past smote |smōt |; past participle smitten |ˈsmitn | ) 1 [ with obj. ] literary strike with a firm blow: he smites the water with his sword. • archaic defeat or conquer (a people or land ): he may smite our enemies. • (usu. be smitten ) (esp. of disease ) attack or affect severely: various people had been smitten with untimely summer flu. 2 (be smitten ) be strongly attracted to someone or something: she was so smitten with the boy. ▶noun archaic a heavy blow or stroke with a weapon or the hand. DERIVATIVES smit er noun ORIGIN Old English smītan ‘to smear, blemish, ’ of Germanic origin; related to Dutch smijten and German schmeissen ‘to fling. ’
smith
smith |smiTH smɪθ | ▶noun a worker in metal. • short for blacksmith. ▶verb [ with obj. ] treat (metal ) by heating, hammering, and forging it: tin-bronze was cast into ingots before being smithed into bracelets. ORIGIN Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch smid and German Schmied .
Smith, Adam
Smith, Adam |smiTH smɪθ | (1723 –90 ), Scottish economist and philosopher. Often regarded as the founder of modern economics, he advocated minimal state interference in economic matters and discredited mercantilism. His works include Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776 ).
Smith, Alfred Emanuel
Smith, Alfred Emanuel |smiTH smɪθ | (1873 –1944 ), US politician. He served as governor of New York 1919 –20 and 1923 –28 and was a Democratic presidential candidate in 1928, losing to Republican Herbert Hoover.
Smith, Bessie
Smith, Bessie |smɪθ smiTH | (1894 –1937 ), US blues singer. She became a leading artist in the 1920s and made over 150 recordings, including some with Benny Goodman and Louis Armstrong. She was involved in a car accident and died after being refused admission to a “whites only ” hospital.
Smith, Dame Maggie
Smith, Dame Maggie |smiTH smɪθ | (1934 –), British stage and movie actress; full name Margaret Natalie Smith. Notable movies: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1969 ), California Suite (1978 ), A Room with a View (1985 ), Gosford Park (2001 ), and the Harry Potter films.
Smith, David
Smith, David |smɪθ smiTH | (1906 –65 ), US sculptor; full name David Roland Smith. His early works were marked by recurring motifs of human violence and greed. These later gave way to a calmer, more monumental style, as in the Cubi series.
Smith, Dean
Smith, Dean |smiTH smɪθ | (1931 –), US college basketball coach; full name Dean Edwards Smith. He coached the University of North Carolina team from 1961 until 1997, establishing a career record of 879 wins and 254 losses. He also coached the 1976 US Olympic basketball team to a gold medal.
Smith, Ian
Smith, Ian |smɪθ smiTH | (1919 –2007 ), Rhodesian statesman; prime minister 1964 –79; full name Ian Douglas Smith. In 1965 he issued a unilateral declaration of independence (UDI ) from Britain because he would not agree to black majority rule. He eventually resigned in 1979.
Smith, John
Smith, John |smiTH smɪθ | (c.1580 –1631 ), American colonist; born in England. One of the leading promoters of English colonization in America, he helped to found the colony of Jamestown in 1607 and served as its president 1608 –09. When captured by Indians from Powhatan's tribe, he was rescued by Pocahontas, Powhatan's daughter.
Smith, Joseph
Smith, Joseph |smɪθ smiTH | (1805 –44 ), US religious leader and founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (the Mormons ). In 1827, according to his own account, he was led by divine revelation to find the sacred texts written by the prophet Mormon, which he published as The Book of Mormon in 1830. He founded the Mormon Church in the same year and later established a large community in Illinois, where he was arrested and murdered by a mob.
Smith, Kate
Smith, Kate |smiTH smɪθ | (1909 –86 ), US singer; full name Kathryn Elizabeth Smith. She began The Kate Smith Show on radio in 1931 with her theme song “When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain. ” In 1938, she introduced Irving Berlin's “God Bless America, ” which also became her trademark song.
Smith, Margaret Chase
Smith, Margaret Chase |smiTH smɪθ | (1897 –1995 ), US politician. A Republican from Maine, she was a member of the US House of Representatives 1940 –1949 and a US senator 1949 –73, making her the first woman to serve in both houses of Congress.
Smith, Stevie
Smith |smɪθ | (1902 –71 ), English poet and novelist; pseudonym of Florence Margaret Smith. She is mainly remembered for her witty, caustic, and enigmatic verse; collections include A Good Time was Had By All (1937 ) and Not Waving But Drowning (1957 ).
Smith, Sydney
Smith |smɪθ | (1771 –1845 ), English Anglican churchman, essayist, and wit. He is notable for his Letters of Peter Plymley (1807 ), which defended Catholic Emancipation.
Smith & Wesson
Smith & Wes son |smiTH and ˈwesən smɪθ ænd ˈwɛsən | ▶noun trademark a type of firearm, in particular a type of revolver. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: named after Horace Smith (1808 –93 ) and Daniel B. Wesson (1825 –1906 ), founders of a US firm of gunsmiths.
smithereens
smith er eens |ˌsmiT͟Həˈrēnz ˌsmɪðəˈrinz | ▶plural noun informal small pieces: a grenade blew him to smithereens . ORIGIN early 19th cent.: probably from Irish smidirín.
smithery
smith er y |ˈsmiTHərē ˈsmɪðəri | ▶noun the work of or goods made by a smith.
Smithfield
Smith field |ˈsmiTHˌfēld ˈsmɪθfild | a town in southern Virginia, in the Tidewater, known for its production of ham; pop. 7,034 (est. 2008 ).
Smithfield ham
Smith field ham ▶noun a dry-cured ham produced near Smithfield, Virginia, from hogs that have fed on hickory nuts, acorns, and peanuts.
Smithsonian Institution
Smith so ni an In sti tu tion |ˌsmiTHˈsōnēən ˌsmɪθˈsoʊnjən ɪnstɪˌtuʃən | a foundation for scientific research, established in 1836 and based in Washington, DC. It operates more than a dozen museums and institutes in Washington and other cities. It originated with a bequest in the will of English chemist and mineralogist James Smithson (1765 –1829 ).
smithsonite
smith son ite |ˈsmiTHsəˌnīt ˈsmɪθsəˌnaɪt | ▶noun a yellow, gray, or green mineral consisting of zinc carbonate typically occurring as crusts or rounded masses. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from the name Smithson (see Smithsonian Institution ) + -ite 1 .
Smithtown
Smith town |ˈsmiTHˌtoun ˈsmɪθtaʊn | a residential town on the northern shore of Long Island in New York; pop. 121,162 (est. 2008 ).
smithy
smith y |ˈsmiTHē ˈsmɪθi | ▶noun ( pl. smithies ) a blacksmith's workshop; a forge. • a blacksmith. ORIGIN Middle English, from Old Norse smithja.
smitten
smit ten |ˈsmitn ˈsmɪtn | past participle of smite.
Oxford Dictionary
smit
smit |smɪt | archaic past participle of smite.
smite
smite |smʌɪt | ▶verb ( past smote |sməʊt |; past participle smitten |ˈsmɪt (ə )n | ) 1 [ with obj. ] literary strike with a firm blow: he smites the water with his sword. • archaic defeat or conquer (a people or land ): he may smite our enemies. • (especially of disease ) attack or affect severely: various people had been smitten with untimely summer flu. 2 (be smitten ) be strongly attracted to someone or something: she was smitten with the boy. ▶noun archaic a heavy blow or stroke with a weapon or the hand: the kirk rang with slaps and smites. DERIVATIVES smiter noun ORIGIN Old English smītan ‘to smear, blemish ’, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch smijten and German schmeissen ‘to fling ’.
smith
smith |smɪθ | ▶noun a worker in metal. • short for blacksmith. ▶verb [ with obj. ] treat (metal ) by heating, hammering, and forging it: tin-bronze was cast into ingots before being smithed into bracelets. ORIGIN Old English, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch smid and German Schmied .
Smith, Adam
Smith |smɪθ | (1723 –90 ), Scottish economist and philosopher. Often regarded as the founder of modern economics, he advocated minimal state interference in economic matters and discredited mercantilism. Notable works: Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations (1776 ).
Smith, Alfred Emanuel
Smith, Alfred Emanuel |smiTH smɪθ | (1873 –1944 ), US politician. He served as governor of New York 1919 –20 and 1923 –28 and was a Democratic presidential candidate in 1928, losing to Republican Herbert Hoover.
Smith, Bessie
Smith |smɪθ | (1894 –1937 ), American blues singer. She made over 150 recordings, including some with Benny Goodman and Louis Armstrong.
Smith, Dame Maggie
Smith, Dame Maggie |smiTH smɪθ | (1934 –), British stage and movie actress; full name Margaret Natalie Smith. Notable movies: The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1969 ), California Suite (1978 ), A Room with a View (1985 ), Gosford Park (2001 ), and the Harry Potter films.
Smith, David
Smith |smɪθ | (1906 –65 ), American sculptor; full name David Roland Smith. His early work is marked by recurring motifs of human violence and greed. These later give way to a calmer, more monumental style, as in the Cubi series.
Smith, Dean
Smith, Dean |smiTH smɪθ | (1931 –), US college basketball coach; full name Dean Edwards Smith. He coached the University of North Carolina team from 1961 until 1997, establishing a career record of 879 wins and 254 losses. He also coached the 1976 US Olympic basketball team to a gold medal.
Smith, Ian
Smith |smɪθ | (1919 –2007 ), Rhodesian statesman, Prime Minister 1964 –79; full name Ian Douglas Smith. In 1965 he issued a unilateral declaration of independence from Britain (UDI ) because he would not agree to black majority rule. He eventually resigned in 1979.
Smith, Joseph
Smith |smɪθ | (1805 –44 ), American religious leader and founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (the Mormons ).
Smith, Kate
Smith, Kate |smiTH smɪθ | (1909 –86 ), US singer; full name Kathryn Elizabeth Smith. She began The Kate Smith Show on radio in 1931 with her theme song “When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain. ” In 1938, she introduced Irving Berlin's “God Bless America, ” which also became her trademark song.
Smith, Margaret Chase
Smith, Margaret Chase |smiTH smɪθ | (1897 –1995 ), US politician. A Republican from Maine, she was a member of the US House of Representatives 1940 –1949 and a US senator 1949 –73, making her the first woman to serve in both houses of Congress.
Smith, Stevie
Smith |smɪθ | (1902 –71 ), English poet and novelist; pseudonym of Florence Margaret Smith. She is mainly remembered for her witty, caustic, and enigmatic verse; collections include A Good Time was Had By All (1937 ) and Not Waving But Drowning (1957 ).
Smith, Sydney
Smith |smɪθ | (1771 –1845 ), English Anglican churchman, essayist, and wit. He is notable for his Letters of Peter Plymley (1807 ), which defended Catholic Emancipation.
Smith, William
Smith |smɪθ | (1769 –1839 ), English land surveyor and geologist, known as the father of English geology. He produced the first geological map of England and Wales, based on his discovery that rock strata found in different places could be distinguished on the basis of their characteristic assemblages of fossils.
Smith & Wesson
Smith & Wes son |smiTH and ˈwesən smɪθ ænd ˈwɛsən | ▶noun trademark a type of firearm, in particular a type of revolver. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: named after Horace Smith (1808 –93 ) and Daniel B. Wesson (1825 –1906 ), founders of a US firm of gunsmiths.
smithereens
smithereens |ˌsmɪðəˈriːnz |(also smithers |ˈsmɪðəz |) ▶plural noun informal small pieces: a grenade blew him to smithereens. ORIGIN early 19th cent.: probably from Irish smidirín.
smithery
smith |ery |ˈsmɪθ (ə )ri | ▶noun [ mass noun ] the work of or goods made by a smith.
Smithfield
Smith field |ˈsmiTHˌfēld ˈsmɪθfild | a town in southern Virginia, in the Tidewater, known for its production of ham; pop. 7,034 (est. 2008 ).
Smithfield
Smith |field |ˈsmɪθfiːld | a part of London containing the city's principal meat market.
Smithfield ham
Smith field ham ▶noun a dry-cured ham produced near Smithfield, Virginia, from hogs that have fed on hickory nuts, acorns, and peanuts.
Smithsonian Institution
Smithsonian Institution |smɪθˈsəʊnɪən | a US foundation for education and scientific research in Washington DC, opened in 1846 and now responsible for administering many museums, art galleries, and other establishments. It originated in a £100,000 bequest in the will of the English chemist and mineralogist James Smithson (1765 –1829 ).
smithsonite
smithsonite |ˈsmɪθsənʌɪt | ▶noun [ mass noun ] a yellow, grey, or green mineral consisting of zinc carbonate typically occurring as crusts or rounded masses. ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from the name Smithson (see Smithsonian Institution ) + -ite 1 .
Smithtown
Smith town |ˈsmiTHˌtoun ˈsmɪθtaʊn | a residential town on the northern shore of Long Island in New York; pop. 121,162 (est. 2008 ).
smithy
smithy |ˈsmɪði | ▶noun ( pl. smithies ) a blacksmith's workshop; a forge. ORIGIN Middle English, from Old Norse smithja.
smitten
smit |ten |ˈsmɪtn | past participle of smite.
American Oxford Thesaurus
smite
smite verb literary See hit (sense 1 of the verb ).
smitten
smitten adjective 1 he was smitten with cholera: struck down, laid low, suffering, affected, afflicted, plagued, stricken. 2 Jane's smitten with you: infatuated with, besotted with, in love with, obsessed with, head over heels; enamored of, attracted to, taken with; captivated by, enchanted by, under someone's spell, moonstruck by; informal bowled over by, swept off one's feet by, crazy about, mad about, keen on, hot on /for, gone on, sweet on, gaga for.
Oxford Thesaurus
smitten
smitten adjective 1 he was smitten with cholera: struck down with, laid low with, prostrated with, suffering from, affected by, afflicted by, plagued with; archaic stricken with. 2 you know Jane's smitten with you? infatuated with, besotted with, in love with, head over heels in love with, hopelessly in love with, obsessed with, enamoured of, very attracted to, very taken with, devoted to, charmed by, captivated by, enchanted by, enthralled by, bewitched by, beguiled by, under someone's spell; informal bowled over by, swept off one's feet by, struck on, crazy about, mad about, wild about, potty about, very keen on, gone on, sweet on, into; literary ensorcelled by. ANTONYMS indifferent.
Duden Dictionary
Smithsonit
Smith so nit Substantiv, maskulin , der |smɪt͜soˈniːt auch …ˈnɪt |der Smithsonit; Genitiv: des Smithsonits, Plural: die Smithsonite neulateinisch ; nach dem englischen Mineralogen Smithson farbloses bis weißes, meist getöntes, durchscheinendes bis trübes Mineral
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
smite
smite /smaɪt /動詞 ~s ; smote /smoʊt /; smitten /smɪ́t (ə )n /, smit /smɪt /, ⦅米 ⦆smote ; smiting 他動詞 1 ⦅古 文 ⦆ «…で » …を強くたたく, 強打する «with » .2 〘聖書 〙〈人 〉を打ち負かす, 殺す, 罰する .3 〈病気などが 〉…を襲う, 悩ます ; 〈良心などが 〉…を責める, 苦しめる .4 〖通例be smitten 〗 «…に » 心を奪われる, 参る ; さいなまれる (down ) «by , with » .
Smith
Smith /smɪθ /名詞 スミス 〘Adam ~, 1723 --90; スコットランドの経済学者 〙.
smith
smith /smɪθ /名詞 C 〖通例複合語で 〗鍛冶 (かじ )屋, 金属細工師 ; 製作 [製造 ]者 (→goldsmith , locksmith ).
smithereens
smith er eens /smɪ̀ðəríːnz /名詞 ⦅くだけて ⦆〖複数扱い 〗(粉々になった )断片 ▸ smash A to [into ] smithereens Aを粉々にする
Smithsonian Institution
Smith s ó ni an Instit ù tion /smɪθsóʊniən -/名詞 〖the ~〗スミソニアン協会 〘J. Smithsonの遺贈した基金により, 1846年米国Washington D.C. に創設された国立の学芸普及機関 〙.
smithy
smith y /smɪ́ði, smɪ́θi /名詞 複 -ies C 鍛冶 (かじ )場 [屋 ].
smitten
smit ten /smɪ́t (ə )n /動詞 smiteの過去分詞 .形容詞 【人 物に 】心奪われた, 恋している «with » .be sm ì tten with a des í re to do 非常に …したい .