smith

[ smith ]
/ smɪθ /

noun

a worker in metal.
a blacksmith.

verb (used with object)

to forge on an anvil; form by heating and pounding: to smith armor.

Origin of smith

before 900; (noun) Middle English, Old English; cognate with German Schmied, Old Norse smithr, Gothic -smitha; (v.) Middle English smithen, Old English smithian; cognate with Old Norse smitha, Gothic gasmithōn

Definition for smith (2 of 2)

Smith
[ smith ]
/ smɪθ /

noun

Example sentences from the Web for smith

British Dictionary definitions for smith (1 of 2)

smith
/ (smɪθ) /

noun

  1. a person who works in metal, esp one who shapes metal by hammering
  2. (in combination)a silversmith

Word Origin for smith

Old English; related to Old Norse smithr, Old High German smid, Middle Low German smīde jewellery, Greek smilē carving knife

British Dictionary definitions for smith (2 of 2)

Smith
/ (smɪθ) /

noun

Medical definitions for smith

Smith
[ smĭth ]
Hamilton Othanel Born 1931

American microbiologist. He shared a 1978 Nobel Prize for the discovery of restriction enzymes and their application to molecular genetics.

Scientific definitions for smith (1 of 2)

Smith
[ smĭth ]
Hamilton Othanel Born 1931

American microbiologist who isolated bacterial enzymes that could split genetic DNA into fragments large enough to retain genetic information but small enough to permit chemical analysis. The existence of these compounds (called restriction enzymes) was earlier predicted by Werner Arber, and their discovery revolutionized genetic engineering. For this work Smith shared the 1978 Nobel Prize for physiology or medicine with Arber and Daniel Nathans.

Scientific definitions for smith (2 of 2)

Smith,
Michael 1932-2000

British-born Canadian biochemist who developed a method for making a specific genetic mutation at any spot on a DNA molecule. He shared with American biochemist Kary B. Mullis the 1993 Nobel Prize for chemistry.