Word of the
Day for Wednesday 9th July 2014
Smirch \ smurch \,
verb;
1. To discolour or soil; spot or smudge with or as with soot, dust, dirt, etc.
2. To sully or tarnish (a person, reputation, character, etc.); disgrace;
discredit.
noun:
1. A dirty mark or smear, as of soot, dust, dirt, etc.
2.
A stain or blot, as on reputation.
Quotes:
…that he could not give him back his life without incurring the smirch of
this disgrace, without even endangering himself.
-- John Galsworthy, The First and the Last , 1919
...Rupert Hentzau had him soundly flogged for daring to smirch the morals
of Zenda by staying out all night in the pursuits of love.
-- Anthony Hope, Rupert of Hentzau , 1895
Origin:
Smirch has been around in English since the late 1400’s. Its origins are
uncertain, though it may have come from the Old French esmorcher
meaning "to torment" or "torture."
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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