Suffocate vs Smoor - What's the difference?
suffocate | smoor |
(ergative) To suffer, or cause someone to suffer, from severely reduced oxygen intake to the body.
(ergative) To die due to, or kill someone by means of, insufficient oxygen supply to the body.
* Shakespeare
(ergative, figuratively) To overwhelm, or be overwhelmed (by a person or issue), as though with oxygen deprivation.
To destroy; to extinguish.
(transitive, obsolete, dialect, UK, Scotland) To suffocate or smother.
As verbs the difference between suffocate and smoor
is that suffocate is to suffer, or cause someone to suffer, from severely reduced oxygen intake to the body while smoor is to suffocate or smother.As an adjective suffocate
is suffocated; choked.suffocate
English
Verb
(suffocat)- Open the hatch, he is suffocating in the airlock!
- He suffocated his wife by holding a pillow over her head.
- Let not hemp his windpipe suffocate .
- I'm suffocating under this huge workload.
- to suffocate fire
Synonyms
* (To suffer from reduced oxygen) asphyxiate * (To die from insufficient oxygen) stifle * (To be overwhelmed) drown * (To reduce oxygen supply) asphyxiate, smother * (To kill by deprivation of oxygen) asphyxiate, stifle * (To make weary with contact) smotherDerived terms
* suffocationExternal links
* * * English ergative verbs ----smoor
English
Alternative forms
* smoreVerb
(en verb)- (Robert Burns)
