• smarmy •
Pronunciation: smah(r)-mi • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Adjective
Meaning: 1. Slicked down, greasy, said especially of hair with too much tonic or oil on it. 2. Unctuous, oily, obsequious, ingratiatingly polite, perhaps with an overlay of feigned intelligence or sophistication.
Notes: Today's Good Word is one that has yet to make it to America. It is widely used in Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and other English-speaking countries but Americans never hear or use it. It may be compared: smarmier, smarmiest, and its root may be used as a qualitative noun, smarm, the quality that makes something smarmy. If you prefer something a bit longer, try smarminess for the noun. I'm sure you won't regret it.
In Play: Have you ever wanted a term that would help you avoid brown-nosing, a far too common expression in the US? Here is how you do it: "Mel Pew always puts on that smarmy charm of his when a customer comes by." Of course, smarminess could conjure up admiration, too: "I don't see how she does it but Celia Feight can pull out one of her smarmy sales pitches and sell ice cubes to an Eskimo."
Word History: Today's word is the adjective from the verb smarm "to slick down, to make smooth with an oily substance". No one has any idea where the verb came from though its meaning and spelling strongly suggest a kinship with smear. It probably originated in a dialectal pronunciation of this word or perhaps as a blend of smear and some other word, maybe balm. This is, however, only speculation. (Today we thank Jeremy Busch for suggesting words of mysterious origins that, equally mysteriously, have not penetrated the [more or less] United States.)
SMARMY
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SMARMY
Last edited by Dr. Goodword on Mon Dec 18, 2006 9:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: SMARMY
Beg to be dickery, Doc. I've heard smarmy for years in USian, without explanation attached. Roget had it listed here in a 1995 edition...
Notes: Today's Good Word is one that has yet to make it to America. It is widely used in Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and other English-speaking countries but Americans never hear or use it.
Stop! Murder us not, tonsured rumpots! Knife no one, fink!
For some reason I think of New York (the city) and Chicago when I envision someone saying 'smarmy'. Could it be that the term is more likely used there than in other US locales?
Oh, and I could hear Frazier Crane and his brother Niles using that word easily... but then, they did have a British maid. I think.
-Tim
(Too early in the morning to be cogitatin' such heavy matters as what nationality a make-believe character on a retired television show was...)
Oh, and I could hear Frazier Crane and his brother Niles using that word easily... but then, they did have a British maid. I think.
-Tim
(Too early in the morning to be cogitatin' such heavy matters as what nationality a make-believe character on a retired television show was...)
Well, Tim, It could be said that smarmy is a bit contrived and affected a word, Frasier [I loved the show, don't get me wrong, here] was affected and pretentious, as was Niles [the whole premise of the show,btw], the British maid, was not. I think she might have used that word though. Frasier was set in Seattle, that smarmy little town in the west that boasts the original skid row[road]. Oh and I love Seattle too.
mark smar-my Bailey
mark smar-my Bailey
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