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[ UK /snˈɒb/ ]
[ US /ˈsnɑb/ ]
NOUN
  1. a person regarded as arrogant and annoying

How To Use snob In A Sentence

  • He could spot hypocrisy, pomposity, smugness, snobbery, tomfoolery and turpitude from miles away.
  • Pictures like "Snoball," which portrays a snow-cone shack with a yellow topped cone is softened by his gentle sense of humor: it is almost a "Pop" painting. John Seed: Rod Penner: Rust on Poles, Crumbling Asphalt, Light Hitting the Grass (PHOTOS)
  • Horse riding suffers from the taint of elitism and snobbery which is a legacy of the past.
  • Favorite designer labels cater to hot bods and rich snobs Bauble Head Site Feed
  • The worst thing about Britain is that so many people are disenfranchised by price and snobbery. Times, Sunday Times
  • But these tedious arguments have more to do with inverted snobbery than progressive values. Times, Sunday Times
  • I wish I had, because my dread about being trapped with cruise-ship bozos would have been replaced by a more accurate dread of being trapped with ocean-liner snobs.
  • I like riding clubs, and I don't think they are snobby at all.
  • After that came a fine example of chu-toro (No. 2 on the sushi-snob toro scale, above maguro and below the hyperdelicate o-toro), which Seki flavored with a mild wasabi sauce.
  • Without missing a beat, the taller man handed Dickie a beer (apparently it was not too early to drink), and began challenging his opponent to distinguish between the genuine ascetic and what he termed the conspicuously nonconsuming -poverty snob. Villa Incognito
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