Schmear Explained

Schmear is a word of Germanic origin, equivalent to "smear" or "spread" (usually fat or butter).In some Germanic languages, the cognate of smear itself means butter (c.f. smör/smør in the North Germanic languages).

The use and spelling of schmear or shmear in American English is a direct loanword from Yiddish, where its original usage referred to cheese.[1] In modern usage it has extended to anything that can be spread, such as cream cheese spread upon a bagel.[2] In some cases, it refers to "an entire set or group of related things", or the expression "the whole shmear".[1] It can also refer to bribery, as a "little extra" spread on top.

In card games such as Schafkopf, Pinochle or Sheepshead, schmearing is to play a high-scoring card to a trick in the hope that one's partner will win it (see schmear (cards)).

As a slang term, the word in Yiddish can also refer to a slap on the face, primarily when disciplining young children.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Now Shmear This. The Forward . Philologos . 10 February 2006 . 1 August 2020.
  2. News: Waldman. Amy. 27 July 1997. Sushi With a Schmear?. The New York Times. 1 August 2020. 0362-4331 . subscription.
    - Web site: 19 October 2012. SHMEAR ME! ONE SMALL TOWN, CREAM CHEESE RULES. . The Post-Standard . Syracuse, NY. https://web.archive.org/web/20121019130611/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-151530407.html. dead. 19 October 2012. 1 August 2020.
    - Web site: Skenazy. Lenore. OY VEY ES SCHMEAR! SOMETHING 'UNHOLEY' IS BEING DONE TO THE BAGEL. New York Daily News . 8 June 1997 . 1 August 2020.