Dictionary Definition
smooch n : an enthusiastic kiss [syn: smack] v : snuggle and lie in a
position where one person faces the back of the others [syn:
snog, spoon]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
smooch- A kiss.
Verb
to smooch- To kiss.
Extensive Definition
A kiss is the touching of one person's lips to
another place, which is used as an expression of affection or to show respect, and as a greeting or a farewell; kissing can be used
to express romantic affection or sexual desire. The word comes from
Old
English cyssan "to kiss", in turn from coss "a kiss". It is
generally considered one of the strongest ways to show
affection.
Biology and evolution
Anthropologists have not reached a consensus as to whether kissing is a learned or an instinctive behavior. Kissing may lead to sexual behaviors. It may be related to grooming behavior also seen between other animals, or arising as a result of mothers premasticating food for their children. When mammalian mothers kiss infants, their bodies automatically recognize biological dangers to their offspring, and their bodies add resistant proteins to their milk. Kissing allows prospective mates to smell and taste each other's pheromones for biological compatibility. Women are subconsciously more attracted to men whose major histocompatibility complex portion of their genome is different from their own, leading to offspring with resistance to a greater number of diseases due to heterosis, and thus having a better chance of survival.This explains why couples are more likely to bond
if they have the right "chemistry." Also, a study by researchers at
University
at Albany found that women use kissing as a tool to find the
right father for their children and to judge men on the quality of
the first kiss that they share.
Non-human primates also exhibit kissing
behavior. Other than primates there are also animals, particularly
many species of birds that
exhibit beak-to-beak and mouth-to-mouth behavior which is typically
interpreted by observers as kissing. Dogs, cats, and other animals display
licking and grooming
behavior among themselves, but also towards humans or other
species. This is sometimes interpreted by observers as a type of
kissing, but some may see this as anthropomorphising the actions of
animals.
Kissing as affection in different cultures
In modern Western culture, kissing is most commonly an expression of affection. This is unlike many parts of the world where kissing may have different meanings. Some literatures even suggest that a significant percentage of humanity do not kiss. An anomaly is India, where public kissing was once quite popular, as evidenced by the common portrayal of kissing apsaras and people in motifs commonly used around palaces and temples. British rule, and a Victorian ethics system pushed public kissing into a taboo act. However, post-independence, public kissing is not uncommon in India.In Middle
Eastern countries until recent times, kissing was only
considered proper when between two men, two women, or parents
kissing their children. Kissing was not looked upon as a sexual
expression in the Middle East.
In Sub
Saharan African, Asiatic,
Native American and Polynesian
cultures, kissing was relatively unknown until introduced by
European and
Western influence.
With the Andamanese, kissing was only used as a
sign of affection towards children and had no sexual
undertones.
In Eastern European countries until recent times,
kissing between two men on the lips as a greeting or a farewell was
as normal as the modern Western handshake . This custom has nearly
died out due to Western influence. In the past, kissing wasn't
considered sexual in Slavic and
Muslim
countries. Between people of close acquaintance, a
reciprocal kiss often is offered as a greeting or farewell. This kind of kiss is
typically made by brief contact of puckered lips to the skin of the
cheek or no
contact at all, and merely performed in the air near the cheek with
the cheeks touching. Such kissing is a common greeting in European
and Latin American countries between a man and a woman or between two women but
also by two men in parts of Europe, the Middle East
and Latin
America, such as Argentina.
However, in most Western societies, it is often more acceptable for
women to kiss each other than for men to kiss each other. People
sometimes kiss children to comfort them or show affection, and vice
versa. This usually takes place on the forehead or cheek.
As an expression of romantic affection or kissing
involves two people pressing their lips together, usually with much
more intensity, and for a considerably longer period of time. In
more passionate kissing couples may open their mouths, suck on each
other's lips or move their tongues into each others' mouths
(see French kiss).
Sexual kissing may also involve one person kissing another on
various parts of the body (see Foreplay).
In some countries kissing booths exist; often at
carnivals a person kisses people for money.
The anatomy of kissing
Kissing is a complex behavior that requires
significant muscular coordination;
in fact, a total of thirty-four to thirty-six muscles working cooperatively.
The most important muscle
involved is the orbicularis
oris muscle, which is used to pucker the lips and informally known as the
kissing muscle. The tongue can also be an extremely important part
of the kiss. Lips have many nerve endings so they are sensitive to
touch and bite.
Kissing body parts
Kissing lips is common, as are other body parts
such as the cheeks,
forehead, neck, hand, etc. Kissing the hand is
common practice when proposing
marriage. Intimate and passionate kissing of private body parts
is common during foreplay.
Symbolic kissing
A kiss can be "blown" using actions of the hand and the mouth. One person kisses their fingers and then pretends to blow it to the other person. This is used to convey affection, usually when parting or when the partners are physically distant but can view each other. Blown kisses are also used when a person wishes to convey affection to a large crowd or audience. In written correspondence a kiss has been represented by the letter 'X' since at least 1763.Screen kiss
A screen kiss is one portrayed in a film (the equivalent act in a play is known as a stage kiss). The plot of a film or play may involve characters falling in love with each other, but the actors playing the roles might not have any personal relationship with each other whatsoever, though it has been known to happen that real-life lovers will star in films together.Stage and or screen kissing may be performed by
actually kissing, or by creating the illusion of actual contact.
Methods involved in the faking of a stage/screen kiss include using
one's thumbs as a barrier for the lips, and turning so that the
respective audience is unable to fully see the kiss itself.
Disease transmission
Diseases which may be transmitted via kissing include mononucleosis and herpes, in which the infectious organism is present in saliva. Research indicates that contraction of HIV via kissing is extremely unlikely, however a woman has been infected with HIV by kissing in 1997; both the woman and infected man had gum disease (so transmission most likely was through the man's blood, not saliva).Notable kisses
In history
- At the Diocleia festival at Megara in honour of Diocles, lover of Philolaus, a kissing contest was held in which boys would kiss a male judge, who awarded a laurel wreath to the boy he deemed the best kisser.
- The Romans distinguished three types of kiss: osculum, a friendship kiss on the cheek; basium, a kiss of affection on the lips; and suavium (also known as savium), a lovers' deep kiss.
- Lord Nelson, British naval commander, famously requested "Kiss me, Hardy", as he lay dying (although they were not, as often reported, his last words).
In religion
- Muslims may kiss the Black Stone during Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca).
- In the gospels of Matthew and Mark (Luke and John omit this) Judas betrayed Jesus with a kiss—an incongruous instance of a kiss intertwined with betrayal.
- The holy kiss or kiss of peace is a traditional part of most Christian liturgies, though usually replaced with a handshake today in Western cultures
- The pope will kiss the ground on arrival to a new country.
- Visitors to the pope traditionally kiss his ring.
- Jews will kiss the Western wall of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem, and other religious articles during prayer such as the Torah, usually by touching their hand, Tallis, or Siddur (prayerbook) to the Torah and then kissing it. Jewish law prohibits kissing members of the opposite sex, except for certain close relatives. See Negiah.
- Eastern Orthodox Christians often kiss the icons around the church as entering, they will also kiss the cross and / or the priests hand in certain other customs in the Church, such as confession or receiving a blessing.
- Catholics will kiss rosary beads as a part of prayer, or kiss their hand after making the sign of the cross.
- Hindus and Sikhs sometimes kiss the ground of a temple.
In folklore
- Both the fairytales "Sleeping Beauty" and "Snow White", and the Greek myth of Pygmalion and Galatea, a romantic kiss is used by a male to awaken or breathe life into a female.
- In modern American versions of the fairytale "Frog Prince", it is the male who is transformed into the prince from the frog kissed by the beautiful female princess.
- It is commonly believed in Ireland that kissing the Blarney Stone will result in being blessed with the 'gift of the gab', which is the ability to talk one's way out of trouble.
In art
- Works entitled The Kiss were painted by Gustav Klimt, Francesco Hayez and Edvard Munch.
- Auguste Rodin created the sculpture The Kiss (Le Baiser).
- The Kiss (1931) is a photograph by Man Ray.
- Andy Warhol made an avant-garde film, the kiss, closeups of couples kissing.
In film
- The Kiss, an 1896 short film, features the first known screen kiss, a forty-seven second recreation of a stage kiss from the musical The Widow Jones. The movie was considered scandalous at the time of its release but has since entered film history as one of the most memorable early films.
- The Kid is a 1921 film, in which a tramp, Charlie Chaplin, kisses a child, Jackie Coogan. This scene is the first in film history in which a man kisses a boy on the mouth.
- Chaplin also employed the "insulting kiss" in at least one film, a device that Bugs Bunny would later copy, countless times, to distract Elmer Fudd and other threatening characters.
- In the 1955 film Lady and the Tramp, the canine characters Lady and Tramp unexpectedly kiss while simultaneously eating a spaghetti noodle from opposite ends, their lips meeting in the middle. Homages to and parodies of this scene have appeared in several movies, including Hot Shots! Part Deux.
- In The Princess Bride, the narrator comments on Westley and Buttercup's kiss: "Since the invention of the kiss, there have been five kisses that were rated the most passionate, the most pure. This one left them all behind."
- In the 1989 animated disney film, The Little Mermaid, Sebastian sings "Kiss the Girl" to Ariel and Prince Eric in an attempt to break the spell that was cast upon her which prevented her from speaking.
- In The Godfather: Part II, Michael Corleone gives, in Havana, an unnaturally aggressive kiss on the mouth to his brother Fredo, effectively telling him that he is disowned from the family because he betrayed its interests. Michael has Fredo killed.
In theatre
- In William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet, Romeo first greets Juliet with an exchange of metaphors stating that he wants to kiss her. Romeo starts by comparing Juliet to a shrine that his "unworthiest hands" are defiling by touching, and his lips to "two blushing pilgrims" who want to make it up to her. Juliet retorts that Romeo, as a pilgrim, should not degrade his hands as "hand-to-hand is holy palmers kiss," meaning they Juliet (saint) and Romeo (pilgrim) can "kiss" hand to hand. Romeo asks why pilgrims and saints can't use their lips, and Juliet responds that saints must use them in prayer. Romeo then gets his kisses by saying that their lips should do what praying hands do (come together). Juliet gives in, but playing the saint, she will not move.
In photography
- Alfred Eisenstaedt's 1945 LIFE magazine photograph of a sailor stamping a masterly kiss on a nurse in New York City's Times Square was taken Aug. 14, 1945, V-J Day. This photo is considered one of Times Square's most iconic photographs. In 2007, a Houston forensics expert verified the identity of the sailor as Glenn McDuffie, who had claimed to be the individual in the photo for many years.
- The French photographer Robert Doisneau shot a couple kissing by the Hotel de Ville (Paris) in 1950. The photo, later called "The Kiss," is now considered a classic, a fact one couple alleging to be the subjects of the photo attempted to exploit in their unsuccessful 1990s lawsuit against the photographer.
- Tanya Chalkin's Kiss, a black-and-white photo of two young women embracing, has become something of a pop culture icon in recent years.
World records
- The longest recorded kiss took place in New York City on December 5, 2001, between Louisa Almedovar and Rich Langley. It lasted 30 hours, 59 minutes and 27 seconds.
- On September 1, 2007, 6980 couples kissed for 10 seconds in Tuzla, Bosnia erasing the previous Guinness World kissing Records of the Philippines and Hungary (for synchronised osculation in 2004 with 5327 Filipino couples, overtaken by Hungary in 2005 with 5875 couples; Filipinos came back in February this year with 6124 couples but the Hungarians responded in June with 6613 couples). The record now awaits official certification.
See also
Notes
Related links
wikiquote Kissing- Put your sweet lips... (A history of the kiss), Keith Thomas, The Times, June 11, 2005
- The Kiss of Life, Joshua Foer, New York Times, February 14, 2006
- How Kissing Works, History and Anatomy of the Kiss, Tracy V. Wilson, Howstuffworks
- Kiss in the Street, Etienne Martin, StreetArt
smooch in Tosk Albanian: Kuss
smooch in Arabic: تقبيل
smooch in Asturian: Pucu
smooch in Belarusian: Пацалунак
smooch in Bulgarian: Целувка
smooch in Catalan: Petó
smooch in Min Dong Chinese: Cṳ̆ng-chói
smooch in Czech: Polibek
smooch in Welsh: Cusan
smooch in Danish: Kys
smooch in German: Kuss
smooch in Modern Greek (1453-): Φιλί
smooch in Esperanto: Kiso
smooch in Spanish: Beso
smooch in Basque: Musu
smooch in Persian: بوسه
smooch in Finnish: Suuteleminen
smooch in French: Baiser
smooch in Western Frisian: Tút
smooch in Hebrew: נשיקה
smooch in Croatian: Poljubac
smooch in Hungarian: Csók
smooch in Armenian: Համբույր
smooch in Icelandic: Koss
smooch in Italian: Bacio
smooch in Inuktitut: ᑯᓂᑉᐳᖅ/kunippuq
smooch in Japanese: 接吻
smooch in Korean: 입맞춤
smooch in Kölsch: Buz
smooch in Lithuanian: Bučinys
smooch in Macedonian: Бакнеж
smooch in Malayalam: ചുംബനം
smooch in Dutch: Zoen
smooch in Norwegian: Kyss
smooch in Uzbek: Oʻpich
smooch in Pennsylvania German: Boss
smooch in Polish: Pocałunek
smooch in Portuguese: Beijo
smooch in Russian: Поцелуй
smooch in Sicilian: Vasata
smooch in Simple English: Kiss
smooch in Slovenian: Poljub
smooch in Swedish: Kyss
smooch in Ukrainian: Поцілунок
smooch in Vietnamese: Hôn
smooch in Yiddish: קוש
smooch in Chinese: 親吻