Scooched vs Smooched - What's the difference?
scooched | smooched |
(scooch)
(US) To shift, move aside, or scoot over.
* 1992 , Kevin Henkes, Words of Stone
* 1998 , George Ostrom, Shannon Ostrom, Nature
* 2002 , Andrew Clements, A Week in the Woods
To crouch.
*, chapter=1
, title= (smooch)
(informal) A kiss.
(informal) To kiss.
* Charlotte Perkins Gilman, The Yellow Wallpaper
As verbs the difference between scooched and smooched
is that scooched is (scooch) while smooched is (smooch).scooched
English
Verb
(head)scooch
English
Alternative forms
* scootch * skooch * skootchVerb
- "We could watch it all night," Joselle would add, scooching closer to her mother. "If it was on all night."
- Lying on your side, start rocking back and forth, scooching to and fro and kicking.
- Turning over onto his back, he scooched down farther into his bag. It was the kind of sleeping bag with a hood built into it, so he pulled on the drawstring...
Mr. Pratt's Patients, chapter=1 , passage=Thinks I to myself, “Sol, you're run off your course again. This is a rich man's summer ‘cottage’ […].” So I started to back away again into the bushes. But I hadn't backed more'n a couple of yards when I see something so amazing that I couldn't help scooching down behind the bayberries and looking at it.}}
Anagrams
*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!