I felt the smile creep onto my face. What does smile creep mean? What about synonyms?
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youtube.com/watch?v=-oehGtcW6BU– Evan MCommented Feb 7, 2014 at 23:14
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-1 for a question that could have been answered by looking in a dictionary or thesaurus– Leon ConradCommented Feb 7, 2014 at 23:19
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1Er, me feeling a smile creep onto my face is okay; but it is really creepy if someone else's smile ("the smile") is creeping onto my face! Ugh!– F.E.Commented Feb 7, 2014 at 23:24
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1Im just translating the text, so it is not my own phrase.– PolliCommented Feb 7, 2014 at 23:33
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1@Leon Conrad: I think the problem (for a non native speaker) is in the parsing of the sentence, not the meaning of the word.– Tom AuCommented Feb 7, 2014 at 23:49
3 Answers
This is an expression that describes the lips slowly moving into a smile. Usually used in a literary context to indicate that some realisation or understanding is dawning upon the protagonist.
"Smile creep" is not a noun. You do not use it in the same sense as "I felt the CREME on my face."
Shorten the phrase to "The smile creeps onto my face." and it makes more sense. Subject= smile, verb= creeps, "my face" is the object.
Creep = to move slowly.
So the above sentence means, essentially, "I felt the smile move slowly onto my face"
Another example: I had to creep quietly into the room to keep from waking the baby.
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A few more (more metaphorical) examples: ivy can creep up a wall, a shadow can creep over the landscape, and a sense of fear can creep into our souls.– J.R. ♦Commented Feb 9, 2014 at 1:44