[
UK
/snˈɒbi/
]
[ US /ˈsnɑbi/ ]
[ US /ˈsnɑbi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
- befitting or characteristic of those who incline to social exclusiveness and who rebuff the advances of people considered inferior
How To Use snobby In A Sentence
- Nate is just a stuck-up, snobby, jerk, who only likes all those popular cheerleading type girls.
- In other words, many of the snobby, clubby vibes that tend to waft around conventional classical music are absent.
- I'd be careful Snobby, that measured barbarian looks like he's getting ready to whip out his snake and hypnotise it into an arrow. Blizzard of Odd: Pedaling to the Bitter End
- Isn't being chippy or snobby a bit yesteryear? Times, Sunday Times
- He wasn't snobby himself but he was the richest guy at Hilton and nothing attracts respect, admiration and worship to a person at a top notch private school than the most green in the place.
- Other leading names in the star-studded cast include Celia Imrie who plays Doris Speed - better known as snobby Rover's Return landlady Annie Walker. WalesOnline - Home
- Its a French word snobby people use that means fake or knockoff. Dork Diaries
- You better start learning Polari, or you'll find yourself outblogged in 2 weeks, Snobby Boy. Wild Kingdom: The Primal Nature of Cycling
- This is going to sound really judgmental and snobby, which is probably because I'm a total asshole, but the clientele at this Walmart is particularly depressing. 7/31/03 Columbia County, NY (9
- The three of them posed for a very snobby picture.