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Words that sound like "snatch" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(transitive) To grasp and remove quickly.
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(slang, intransitive) To inform on, especially in betrayal of others.
(n)
(Scotland) Verbal abuse; insolence; guff.
(obsolete) A smack or taste.
An item of food eaten between meals.
(colloquial) Something very successful or popular (as music, food, fashion, etc).
(informal, ambitransitive) To kiss.
(adj)
(slang) Having an attractive, sculpted appearance of face and/or body.
One who snatches, or steals by snatching.
To soil, stain or smudge.
(originally Scotland, chiefly US) A tiny amount; a smidge or smidgen.
To take dishonestly or unfairly, to steal from or cheat out of.
In snatches or glimpses.
(also transitive with the dummy pronoun it) To save in a miserly manner; to hoard.
(N)
(Società Navigazione Alta Velocità) an Italian company that operates ferry services from Italy to Sardinia, Croatia and Sicily.
Marked by snow, characterized by snow.
Any of the suborder Serpentes of legless reptile with long, thin bodies and fork-shaped tongues.
A quick breaking or cracking sound or the action of producing such a sound.
A distinct flavor, especially if slight.
(intransitive, medicine) To expel air as a reflex induced by an irritation in the nose.
Any of very many animals (either hermaphroditic or nonhermaphroditic), of the class Gastropoda, having a coiled shell.
(intransitive) To sleep, especially briefly; to nap, doze.
One who sneaks; one who moves stealthily to acquire an item or information.
(informal, uncountable, sometimes slightly vulgar) Mucus, especially mucus from the nose.
The long, projecting nose, mouth, and jaw of a beast, as of pigs.
(clothing) A piece of cloth designed to be worn around the waist.
One or both regions of the Earth where it snows the year round; the Arctic and/or Antarctic.
(figuratively) A problem or difficulty with something.
To obscure by blurring; to smear.
Synonym of smidgen.
(intransitive) To creep or go stealthily; to come or go while trying to avoid detection, as a person who does not wish to be seen.
A freshwater and marine fish of the family Centropomidae in the order Perciformes.
(Danish for "chat") a shareware Internet Relay Chat client written by Kent Sorensen for the Macintosh platform.
(slang) A situation.
(transitive) To mash or push down or in; compress
Alternative spelling of smush. [(transitive) To mash or push down or in; compress]
a city southwest of Leeuwarden and the seat of the former municipality of Sneek in the province of Friesland, Netherlands.
(slang) A temper; a bad mood.
(informal) An elitist or snobbish person.
Quick, smart; sharp, active, brisk or nimble; lively.
(cricket) To hit (the ball) with the edge of the bat, causing a slight deflection.
(obsolete) A large knife.
(figurative, archaic) A stain on somebody's reputation.
(obsolete) To clear of mucus; to blow (one's nose).
A surname.
(Ireland, education) Initialism of special needs assistant.
the eponymous debut studio album by the Serbian band Smak, released in 1975 by ZKP RTLJ.
(historical) An administrative and military centre for the Zaporozhian and Danube Cossacks.
(slang) One who snitches; an informer or informant.
(South Korea) Initialism of Seoul National University.
(intransitive, obsolete) To snow.
(computing, uncountable) social, mobile, analytics, cloud: a group of technologies
The shaft of a scythe.
(shipbuilding) Upward curving observed in the planks of a wooden ship or boat.
(Northern England, Scotland) A latch or catch.
(networking) Initialism of Server Name Indication (“TLS extension”).
Characteristic of snitches or snitching; tell-tale
to snow
(obsolete or Scotland) A snipe.
(US, dated, dialect) The hooded merganser.
Obsolete spelling of sny (“to abound, swarm, teem, be infested”) . [(obsolete, rare, intransitive) To move, proceed.]
A district municipality on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, named for the Saanich people.
(nautical) The loose part of a rope; slack.
(transitive, Scotland) To snatch with the jaws; snap at something greedily.
saugh
Alternative form of smoodge. [To act in an ingratiating manner; to fawn.]
Obsolete spelling of sny (“abound, swarm, teem, be infested”). [(obsolete, rare, intransitive) To move, proceed.]
small deciduous aromatic shrub (or tree) having spiny branches and yellowish flowers; eastern north america
(slang, dated) To kiss and cuddle; to canoodle.
(UK, archaic) To lop; to prune.