Smooched vs Mooched - What's the difference?
smooched | mooched |
(smooch)
(informal) A kiss.
(informal) To kiss.
* Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper
(mooch)
(British) To wander around aimlessly, often causing irritation to others.
To beg, cadge, or sponge; to exploit or take advantage of others for personal gain.
* 1990 , p. 26, Michael L. Frankel & friends, Gently with the Tides , Center for Marine Conservation, Washington (DC), ISBN 1879269-007, p. 26,
(British) To steal or filch.
* 1922 , , The Middle of Things , ch. 16,
One who mooches; a moocher.
As verbs the difference between smooched and mooched
is that smooched is (smooch) while mooched is (mooch).smooched
English
Verb
(head)smooch
English
Etymology 1
Perhaps from a dialectal variation of smack. Compare also (etyl) .Alternative forms
* (l)Noun
(es)Derived terms
* smoochies * smoochiness * smoochyVerb
(es)- They smooched in the doorway.
Derived terms
* smoocherEtymology 2
Verb
(es)- Then she said that the paper stained everything it touched, that she had found yellow smooches on all my clothes and John's, and she wished we would be more careful!
mooched
English
Verb
(head)mooch
English
Alternative forms
* (l)Verb
(es)- I managed to mooch my way up the journalistic ladder to the next, more impressive level of “Interviewer”.
- These chaps that mooch about, as Hyde was doing, pick up all sorts of odds and ends. He may have pinched them from a chemist’s shop.
