[
UK
/snˈæpʃɒt/
]
[ US /ˈsnæpˌʃɑt/ ]
[ US /ˈsnæpˌʃɑt/ ]
NOUN
-
an informal photograph; usually made with a small hand-held camera
he tried to get unposed shots of his friends
my snapshots haven't been developed yet
How To Use snapshot In A Sentence
- In the absence of actual selfie evidence, let me provide a few snapshots. Times, Sunday Times
- She pulled out her camera and took several snapshots of it as she approached.
- From Australia and New Zealand to Malaysia and India — in text and film and music and image — this booklet is a snapshot of the Asian commons. ACIA: Furthering the Commons in Asia
- This year alone provides a typical snapshot. Times, Sunday Times
- Under her they merely turn from pointillistic snapshots into abstract expressionism.
- Using traced photos, Breslin's snapshot style gets at the scenario's serio-comic complications.
- The post-war change in approach can be symbolised in the snapshot, subject of another section of the exhibition.
- This years typical shopping basket of goods provides a snapshot of changing consumer trends.
- Apart from the 1927 portraits of Atget in his dotage and a single snapshot of him in middle age, we have no access to Atget's face, not in his prime.
- I think he wanted to be seen as a serious writer and serious writers don't make toothy smiles in snapshots. Times, Sunday Times