It's a valid grammatical construction. By the way, "context" doesn't mean what you think it means.
He smirked at his mother after he said he wouldn't get into anymore trouble.
Smirked is a verb and And AdjectiveAdjective Example: The smirked dolphin looked crazy.Verb Example: The little boy smirked his lips at the baby who was crying. It is a standard intransitive weak verb in the past tense and the past participle, smirk, smirked, skirked. It is not used as an adjective. Examples: 'Please don't smirk at the teacher like that!' or 'Arsenal's keeper smirked as the Spurs striker shot wide of the goal'.
one..i think
he smirked his way through the interview
Smilied in a evil way or in pride.
both are but only in the correct context
He smiled and kinda smirked at me as he drove.
"Not like that" can be grammatically correct, depending on the context.
The correct phrase is "Do not send." "Send" is the correct verb form in this context.
It could be, but it depends on the context!
They're both correct in the appropriate context. From your question I can't decipher context so can't really say.
'Did she came...' is incorrect. 'Did she come...' is correct.