Smite Definition

smīt
smites, smiting, smitten, smote
verb
smites, smiting, smitten, smote
To inflict a heavy blow on, with or as if with the hand, a tool, or a weapon.
American Heritage
To hit or strike hard.
Webster's New World
To bring into a specified condition by or as by a blow.
To smite someone dead.
Webster's New World
To drive or strike (a weapon, for example) forcefully onto or into something else.
American Heritage
To strike or attack with powerful or disastrous effect.
Smitten by the flu.
Webster's New World

Origin of Smite

  • From Middle English smiten, from Old English smÄ«tan (“to daub, smear, smudge; soil, defile, pollute"), from Proto-Germanic *smÄ«tanÄ… (“to throw"), from Proto-Indo-European *smeyd- (“to smear, whisk, strike, rub"). Cognate with Saterland Frisian smieta (“to throw, toss"), West Frisian smite (“to throw"), Low German smieten (“to throw, chuck, toss"), Dutch smijten (“to fling, hurl, throw"), Middle Low German besmitten (“to soil, sully"), German schmeißen (“to fling, throw"), Danish smide (“to throw"), Gothic 𐌱𐌹𐍃𐌼𐌴𐌹𐍄𐌰𐌽 (bismeitan).

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English smiten from Old English smītan to smear

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

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