Source : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Smut \Smut\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Smutted}; p. pr. & vb. n.
{Smutting}.]
1. To stain or mark with smut; to blacken with coal, soot, or
other dirty substance.
2. To taint with mildew, as grain. --Bacon.
3. To blacken; to sully or taint; to tarnish.
4. To clear of smut; as, to smut grain for the mill.
Source : WordNet®
smut
n 1: a black colloidal substance consisting wholly or principally
of amorphous carbon and used to make pigments and ink
[syn: {carbon black}, {lampblack}, {soot}]
2: destructive diseases of plants (especially cereal grasses)
caused by fungi that produce black powdery masses of
spores
3: any fungus of the order Ustilaginales [syn: {smut fungus}]
4: creative activity (writing or pictures or films etc.) of no
literary or artistic value other than to stimulate sexual
desire [syn: {pornography}, {porno}, {porn}, {erotica}]
[also: {smutting}, {smutted}]
smut
v 1: make obscene; "This line in the play smuts the entire act"
2: stain with a dirty substance, such as soot
3: become affected with smut; "the corn smutted and could not
be eaten"
4: affect with smut or mildew, as of a crop such as corn
[also: {smutting}, {smutted}]
smutted
See {smut}