Smell

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google

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Middle English: of unknown origin.


wiktionary

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From Middle English smellen, smillen, smyllen, smullen, from Old English *smyllan, *smiellan(“to smell, emit fumes”), from Proto-West Germanic *smallijan(“to glow, burn, smoulder”), from Proto-Indo-European *smel-(“to burn, smoke, smoulder; tar, pitch”). The noun is from Middle English smel, smil, smul(“smell, odour”). Related to Saterland Frisian smeele(“to smoulder”), Middle Dutch smōlen(“to burn, smoulder”) (whence Dutch smeulen(“to smoulder”)), Middle Low German smölen(“to be hazy, be dusty”) (whence Low German smölen(“smoulder”)), Low German smullen(“emit smoke”), West Flemish smoel(“stuffy, muggy, hazy”), Danish smul(“dust, powder”), Lithuanian smilkyti(“to incense, fumigate”), Lithuanian smilkti(“to smudge, smolder, fume, reek”), Lithuanian smalkinti(“to fume”), Middle Irish smál, smól, smúal(“fire, gleed, embers, ashes”), Russian смола́(smolá, “resin, tar”). Compare smoulder, smother.


etymonline

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smell (v.)

late 12c., "emit or perceive an odor," not found in Old English, perhaps cognate with Middle Dutch smolen, Low German smelen "to smolder" (see smolder). However, OED says "no doubt of Old English origin, but not recorded, and not represented in any of the cognate languages." Related: Smelled or smelt; smelling.

Smelling salts (1840), used to revive the woozy, typically were a scented preparation of carbonate of ammonia. Smell-feast (n.) "one who finds and frequents good tables, one who scents out where free food is to be had" is from 1510s ("very common" c. 1540-1700, OED). Smell-smock "licentious man" was in use c. 1550-c. 1900. To smell a rat "be suspicious" is from 1540s.




smell (n.)

"odor, aroma, stench," late 12c.; "faculty of perceiving by the nose," c. 1200; see smell (v.). Ousted Old English stenc (see stench) in most senses.