Examples of 'smacks' in a sentence
Meaning of "smacks"
Smack is a verb used when something makes a sharp sound or when someone hits something with an open hand
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- plural of smack
- third-person singular simple present indicative form of smack
How to use "smacks" in a sentence
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smacks
This notion smacks of a naïve kind of intellectualism.
What you need is a few good smacks.
Woman driver smacks into another car.
Smacks six thou down on the black.
Another one smacks you in the face.
Smacks right up against the laws of thermodynamics.
Have said repeatedly smacks of emotional blackmail.
That smacks of a man with a guilty conscience.
Scumbag ballplayer smacks his girl around.
It smacks of desperation and it will not work.
Sometimes life smacks you in the face.
This smacks to me of taking it very seriously indeed.
Fresh air that smacks your cheeks.
That smacks of more money than sense.
The big project approach smacks of complexity.
See also
And he smacks him with his bat.
I am basically against anything that smacks of ego.
It all smacks very much of george orwell.
Unenquiring minds think this smacks of collusion.
When it smacks them around the head.
I was surprised by the power of his smacks.
It smacks of the protection of home and family.
Burke hates anything that smacks of a government giveaway.
Sonny smacks the corner of the blackboard.
His report rather smacks of complacency.
It smacks of desperation all the things you are not.
Alice refuses and smacks him in the face.
This smacks of some sort of ritual.
Because even that smacks of rebellion.
Smacks you square in your flat table face.
When life smacks you in the face.
Smacks our faces in the mud.
The car smacks into a wall.
Smacks dashboard and sighs heavily.
To say the least it smacks of high level nepotism.
It smacks of resignation and lack of enthusiasm.
The whole thing smacks of impersonality.
It smacks of a native american burial custom.
At least until it smacks us in the face.
This smacks of nineteenth century capitalism.
And then reality smacks you in the face.
This smacks of the desperate act of a desperate man.
The whole thing smacks of politics.
She smacks him on the nose.
Prescribing specific outcomes in the end smacks of arrogance.
Pennock smacks of the same sort of bigotry.
He jumps off right before it smacks into a headstone.
A penguin smacks another penguin into an ice hole.
She has a nastiness that smacks of the devil.
All of this smacks to me of cultural apartheid.