smudger

English

Etymology

smudge + -er

Noun

smudger (plural smudgers)

  1. One who, or that which, smudges.
    • 1964, William Wasserstrom, Civil Liberties and the Arts: Selections from Twice a Year, 1938-48 (page 230)
      Servile smudgers of history, prattling about an Emil Ludwig and a Thomas Mann season — meaning the Weimar period — as if it had produced me and as if I had used the Republic for a background!
    • 2002, David Bergsland, Introduction to Digital Publishing (page 147)
      The tools can get rather exotic - spinners, rubber stamps, airbrush, smudgers, and so on.

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