SMACK vs H: NOUN
- A slang term for heroin.
- A quick, smart blow; a slap.
- A quick, sharp noise, as of the lips when suddenly separated, or of a whip.
- A small quantity; a taste.
- Taste or flavor, esp. a slight taste or flavor; savor; tincture. Also used figuratively.
- A small sailing vessel, commonly rigged as a sloop, used chiefly in the coasting and fishing trade.
- A fishing-vessel provided with a well in which the fish are kept alive; a fishing-smack.
- A slooprigged vessel formerly much used in the coasting and fishing trade.
- A loud kiss; a buss.
- A sharp, sudden blow, as with the flat of the hand; a slap.
- A smart, sharp sound made by the lips, as in a hearty kiss, or as an expression of enjoyment after an agreeable taste; also, a similar sound made by the lash of a whip; a crack; a snap.
- Touch, spice, dash, tinge.
- Synonyms Flavor, Savor, etc. (see taste), tang.
- A small quantity; a taste; a smattering.
- Scent; smell.
- Hence A flavor or suggestion of a certain quality.
- A taste or flavor; savor; especially, a slight flavor that suggests a certain thing; also, the sense of taste.
- Heroin.
- A sharp blow or slap.
- A noisy kiss.
- The loud sharp sound of smacking.
- A small amount; a smattering.
- A suggestion or trace.
- A distinctive flavor or taste.
- A fishing boat sailing under various rigs, according to size, and often having a well used to transport the catch to market.
- The taste experience when a savoury condiment is taken into the mouth
- Street names for heroin
- A blow from a flat object (as an open hand)
- A sailing ship (usually rigged like a sloop or cutter) used in fishing and sailing along the coast
- An enthusiastic kiss
- The act of smacking something; a blow delivered with an open hand
- Hentai.
- A grade of pencil with lead that makes lighter marks than a pencil grade HB but darker marks than a pencil of grade 2H; a pencil with hard lead.
- Hits, the number of hits by a given batter in a given season.
- A street term for heroin.
- IUPAC 1-letter abbreviation for histidine
- Symbol for a henry, a unit for measurement of electrical inductance in the International System of Units.
- Symbol for hydrogen.
- Planck's constant
- Voiceless glottal fricative.
- The eighth letter of the basic modern Latin alphabet.
- The ordinal number eighth, derived from this letter of the English alphabet, called aitch and written in the Latin script.
- An abbreviation of House of Commons.
- An abbreviation of hoc titulo, ‘in (or under) this title.’
- In electricity, an abbreviation of high resistance.
- An abbreviation of Home Ruler.
- An abbreviation of headquarters.
- Of high-pressure, when applied to cyliuders: when applied to engines it means horse-power, and, to prevent confusion, when a high-pressure engine is meant the words should be written out.
- Of High Priest;
- An abbreviation of half pay;
- Of Home Mission or Home Missionary.
- Of Hallelujah Meter;
- An abbreviation of Hawaiian Islands.
- Of Horse Guards.
- Of His Grace;
- An abbreviation
- An abbreviation of the Latin hic est, ‘he is’; of the Latin hoc est, ‘this is.’
- Of Hydraulic Engineer.
- Of Bis (or Her) Excellency;
- An abbreviation of His Eminence;
- An abbreviation of Heralds' College.
- An abbreviation of House of Lords.
- An abbreviation in epitaphs of the Latin phrase hic jacet (which see).
- An abbreviation of His Holiness —that is, the Pope—or of His (or Her) Highness.
- Something shaped like the letter H.
- The eighth in a series.
- Any of the speech sounds represented by the letter h.
- The eighth letter of the modern English alphabet.
- (thermodynamics) a thermodynamic quantity equal to the internal energy of a system plus the product of its volume and pressure
- A nonmetallic univalent element that is normally a colorless and odorless highly flammable diatomic gas; the simplest and lightest and most abundant element in the universe
- A unit of inductance in which an induced electromotive force of one volt is produced when the current is varied at the rate of one ampere per second
- The constant of proportionality relating the energy of a photon to its frequency; approximately 6.626 x 10\-34 joule-second
- The 8th letter of the Roman alphabet
SMACK vs H: VERB
- Kiss lightly
- Deliver a hard blow to
- Eat noisily by smacking one's lips
- Have an element suggestive (of something)
- Have a distinctive or characteristic taste
- N/A
SMACK vs H: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To kiss with a close compression of the lips, so as to make a sound when they separate; to kiss with a sharp noise; to buss.
- To have or exhibit indications of the presence of any character or quality.
- To have a smack; to be tinctured with any particular taste.
- To collide sharply and noisily.
- To make or give a smack.
- To strike sharply and with a loud noise.
- To kiss noisily.
- To press together and open (the lips) quickly and noisily, as in eating or tasting.
- To give an indication; be suggestive. Often used with of:
- To have a distinctive flavor or taste. Used with of.
- N/A
SMACK vs H: ADVERB
- As if with a smack or slap.
- With a smack.
- Directly
- N/A
SMACK vs H: OTHER WORD TYPES
- A blow delivered with an open hand
- The act of smacking something
- Press (the lips) together and open (the lips) noisily, as in eating
- In a sudden and direct or aggressive manner, as with a smack or slap; sharply; plump; straight.
- To come or go against anything with great force.
- To kiss so as to make a smart, sharp sound with the lips; kiss noisily.
- To make a sharp sound by a smart parting of the lips, as after tasting something agreeable.
- To kiss, especially in a coarse or noisy manner.
- To part smartly so as to make a sharp sound: used chiefly of the lips.
- To cause (something) to emit a sharp sound by striking or slapping it with something else: as, he smacked the table with his fist.
- To smite or strike smartly and so as to produce a sharp sound; give a sharp blow to, especially with the inside of the hand or fingers; slap: as, to smack one's cheek.
- Hence, figuratively, to have a certain character or property, especially in a slight degree; suggest a certain character or quality: commonly with of.
- To have a taste; have a certain flavor; suggest a certain thing by its flavor.
- The seventh degree in the diatonic scale, being used by the Germans for B natural. See b.
- The part of a plunger pump which contains the valve.
- The eighth letter of the English alphabet, is classed among the consonants, and is formed with the mouth organs in the same position as that of the succeeding vowel. It is used with certain consonants to form digraphs representing sounds which are not found in the alphabet, as sh, th, �, as in shall, thing, �ine (for zh see §274); also, to modify the sounds of some other letters, as when placed after c and p, with the former of which it represents a compound sound like that of tsh, as in charm (written also tch as in catch), with the latter, the sound of f, as in phase, phantom. In some words, mostly derived or introduced from foreign languages, h following c and g indicates that those consonants have the hard sound before e, i, and y, as in chemistry, chiromancy, chyle, Ghent, Ghibelline, etc.; in some others, ch has the sound of sh, as in chicane. See Guide to Pronunciation, §§ 153, 179, 181-3, 237-8.
- As an abbreviation: , , ,
- As a symbol:
- As a medieval numeral, 200. and with a dash over it, thus, , 200,000.
- The sound belonging to the character in Phenician was that of a rough guttural spirant, nearly like the ch in German, or in Scotch loch (marked in this dictionary ċh). In the Greek alphabet it had at first the kindred but weaker value of our h; and with this value it passed over to Italy, and so continued there; but in Greece it came later to be used as a long ē (down to that time long and short e had been written alike E), the h-sound being indicated by a half H, namely ├, afterward reduced to └ and ‘, which last then retained the h-value, or that of the “rough breathing,” so called, now usually printed’. Our h-sound is called the “aspiration,” as being a near approach to pure unmodified breathing, an audible emission of breath before a vowel or semivowel, made, in every case, in the same position of the mouth-organs as that required by the following sound. That is, the h of ha is made in the mouth-position of a, the utterance in the combination changing only from unintonated to intonated breath; that of he is made in the mouth-position of ee;.and so with ho, and so on. Thus, the h before each different vowel represents a different product, and h signifies a sort of common surd to all the vowels as sonants; and, being dependent always for its special character upon the following sound, it is very suitably written by the Greeks with a subordinate sign prefixed to the vowel. In English the aspiration occurs before all the vowels, and also before the semivowels w and y, as in whit (that is, hwit) and hue (that is, hyu), though in these cases some authorities hold that the w- and y-sounds themselves are not uttered, but only the h-sound, this being what it would be if the semivowel were really pronounced. This view may in part depend upon an actual difference of pronunciation, but is more probably an error of apprehension and analysis; certainly, in our ordinary utterance, whit is to hoo-it precisely as wit is to oo-it. In older English our h-sound was pronounced also before r and l, as in AS. hring, English ring, AS. hrīm, English rime, AS. hrōf, English roof, AS. hlāf, English loaf, AS. hlid, English lid, AS. hliehhan, English laugh, etc.; in other languages it is found also before m and n. The English h in the Teutonic part of the language comes from an original surd guttural, a k, which first became a guttural spirant (= ch in German, or in Scotch loch), and was then further weakened to a mere aspiration. The spirant becomes mere aspiration when its production ceases to be accompanied with a constriction at the top of the throat, causing a rough fricative sound, and so giving a specific character to the utterance. A guttural mute was changed to a spirant also in the interior of many of our words, and was formerly written with h: thus, AS. niht, English night; but it has long been lost in pronunciation, after being written with gh instead of h (the g never pronounced). The aspiration, indeed, being the weakest and least positive of alphabetic sounds, is especially liable to become silent. The Latin initial h was totally silent in the vernacular forms which emerged as Old French and Italian, and in the earliest Old French, as still in Italian, it does not appear in writing. The earliest Old French words, therefore, having original Latin h, were transferred into Middle English without h, as abit, able, eir, onest, onor, onur, oure, ure, etc., through similar Old French forms from Latin habitus, habilis, heres, honestus, honor, hora, etc. In later Old French and Middle English the pedantic habit of imitating the spelling of the original Latin, if known, led to the general restoration of h in these words, a restoration completed in modern French, though the h has remained always unpronounced in French, and, in the oldest and most familiar words, in English. The h now appears in the modern forms of all the above words, and others (except able and arbor, the restored forms hable, harbor, having died out), namely, unpronounced in heir, honest, honor, hour, etc., and pronounced (by conformity to later words) in habit, heretic, etc., while in some, as herb, humble, etc., the pronunciation wavers between the earlier unaspirated form and the later aspirated form. The confusion existing in such cases led to some variation in the spelling of words originally and properly beginning with a vowel, the h, though not pronounced, being often erroneously inserted in writing, as in habandon, habound, habundance, etc., for abandon, abound, abundance, etc. A similar confusion extended to words of Anglo-Saxon or other Teutonic origin, the h being dropped sometimes where it should appear, and, more often, inserted where it should not appear, as hape for ape, his for is, etc. This confusion characterizes the present pronunciation of the London cockney. The habitual omission of h is, however, quite common even in educated speech in certain positions, and even where usually uttered it is apt to be lost after a final consonant in rapid and easy speaking. In the pronouns he, him, her, when unaccented, as they usually are after another word, the h is almost universally omitted in colloquial speech, an omission long recognized in the common spelling of the related neuter pronoun hit, now always written and pronounced it, and in the colloquial plural hem, now written 'em. The h forms a number of digraphs, or compound characters, some of them of great importance and frequency. The origin of this practice goes back to the earliest Greek period, when the so-called aspirates were real aspirates— that is, mutes with an audible bit of flatus expelled after them: kh nearly as in backhouse, th as in boat-hook, ph as in haphazard. The sounds were at first so written in Greek, with an h after each mute; later, simple characters were devised to take the place of these combinations. But in Greek words carried into Italy the spelling with h was kept up: thus, chorus, theatrum, philosophus; then, in the change of these aspirates to spirants, unitary values were won by the digraphs; and the use of th, especially with spirant value (thin, that), was widely extended to the Teutonic part of our language. The digraph sh comes by alteration of the k of sk to a spirant, and its fusion with the sibilant, making a more palatal sibilant. The origin of our gh (always either silent or pronounced as f), by graphic change from earlier h, has been stated above. (See also under G.) Finally, rh is found in Greek words, as rhetoric, and represents an r with preceding aspiration, as in AS. hring (whence it should properly be written hr, as hw for wh); but the aspiration is always lost in our utterance. For the name of the letter, see aitch.
- The eighth letter and sixth consonant in the English alphabet.
- In pathol., hypermetropia.
- In electricity, the symbol for henry (which see).
- In mineralogy, the initial letter of the general symbol, hkl, applied to a face of a crystal in the system of Miller. See symbol.
- An abbreviation of House of Representatives.
- An abbreviation of horse-power.
- An abbreviation of His (or Her) Majesty.
- (abbreviation) humidity
- (abbreviation) hot
- (abbreviation) home telephone number
- (abbreviation) hit
- (abbreviation) high
- (abbreviation) henry
- (abbreviation) Hamiltonian
- (abbreviation) hour
- (abbreviation) height
- (initialism) abbreviation for hour (particularly when used as a (non-SI) unit of time alongside International System of Units (SI) units)
SMACK vs H: RELATED WORDS
- Flavor, Slapdash, Junk, Heroin, Taste, Tang, Savor, Relish, Smooch, Reek, Peck, Bang, Thwack, Shit, Slap
- Spme, Scch, Jh, Diploma, Grad
SMACK vs H: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Horse, Flavour, Bolt, Flavor, Slapdash, Junk, Heroin, Taste, Tang, Relish, Smooch, Reek, Bang, Shit, Slap
- Diploma, Grad
SMACK vs H: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Tar, Smack, H, Brown Sugar, Junk, Skag, Dope.
- Uldred can smack characters around for heavy damage.
- Montana smack dab in the middle of them.
- Learned motivation we give you would talk smack?
- Sometimes he will smack them in the head.
- Great location right smack bang in the middle!
- Have You Ever Seen a Smack of Jellyfish?
- But the gallant little smack needed no help.
- I wouldn't insist that you smack your child, but I don't believe Parliament fixes anything by taking away my right to smack mine.
- Just the flat, repetitive smack, smack of our bullets ripping into layers of Kevlar and ceramic plating wrapped around dull metal.
- Yamagishi K, Iso H, Yatsuya H, et al.
- Relas H, Gylling H, Rajaratnam RA, Miettinen TA.
- Ueno H, Koyama H, Tanaka S, et al.
- Otgaar H, Candel I, Merckelbach H, Wade KA.
- Furukawa TA, Kawakami N, Saitoh M, Ono Y, Nakane Y, Nakamura Y, Tachimori H, Iwata N, Uda H, Nakane H, et al.
- Hebebrand J, Himmelmann GW, Heseker H, Schafer H, Remschmidt H: Use of percentilesfor the body mass index in anorexia nervosa: diagnostic, epidemiological, and therapeuticconsiderations.
- Nishioka K, Katayama I, Kondo H, Shinkai H, Ueki H, Tamaki K et al.
- Tabuse H, Kalali A, Azuma H, Ozaki N, Iwata N, Naitoh H, et al.
- Ghasemi H, Murtomaa H, Torabzadeh H et al.
- Schneiderheinze H, Prokosch H, Apel H, Bellut L, Wullich B, Trollmann R, et al.
SMACK vs H: QUESTIONS
- Did Eminem get a tattoo on his arm from Smack That?
- What are some examples of smack in the Corpus Christi story?
- What are the odds of a smack in runescapes Duel Arena?
- Why did Bob Kelso Smack the nurse with his clipboard?
- Will Rico Nasty Smack a Playboi Carti fan on Twitter?
- How to create chatchat application using XMPP Smack API Android?
- How many letters are in Smack That singer crossword puzzle?
- Did the 1914 Treasury notes smack of quantitative easing?
- What is smack in the middle of another controversy?
- Who did Laura Norton play in Smack Family Robinson?
- What is the eligibility for H&H Kotak Institute of Science Rajkot?
- Who can fill in information on form H-25 of Appendix H?
- How does this H Mart compare to other H Marts in NJ?
- Is Local 1180 following up with H+H on a payout date?
- What is the Motor Carrier (MC) number for H&H Express?
- Why choose H&H Classic for El Camino sheet metal parts?
- What are the hours of operation for H&H truck parts?
- Is it computationally infeasible to find X with H = H?
- Does Endoglycosidase H (Endo H) cleave complex glycans?
- What are the hours of operation for H&H and H hunting supplies?