0 past simple and past participle of smear
2 to publicly accuse someone of something unpleasant, unreasonable, or unlikely to be true in order to harm their reputation:
We discussed both the classical approach, assuming distributed binding sites in a smeared layer and a one-binding-site model.
In case of a homogeneous distribution of the calcium stores the waves are more smeared out.
Pieces of tissue were transferred to some drops of 45% acetic acid on pre-cleaned slides, smeared on them and air-dried for at least one day.
A general conclusion is that the smeared charge assumption is valid if the charge density is high enough.
As they explain, if this is not the case the ensemble average results will be smeared out in the edges of the averaging window.
Trajectories can therefore leave trails, can be smeared across space or be spread in a more egalitarian way through space.
In the natural case, the phase jitter smeared the detailed feature.
Rather, the fine structure will be smeared by diffusion.