Associations to the word «Snipe»

Wiktionary

SNIPE, noun. (plural: snipes or snipe) Any of various limicoline game birds of the genera Gallinago, Lymnocryptes and Coenocorypha in the family Scolopacidae, having a long, slender, nearly straight beak.
SNIPE, noun. A fool; a blockhead.
SNIPE, noun. A shot fired from a concealed place.
SNIPE, noun. (naval slang) A member of the engineering department on a ship.
SNIPE, verb. (intransitive) To hunt snipe.
SNIPE, verb. (intransitive) To shoot at individuals from a concealed place.
SNIPE, verb. (intransitive) (by extension) To shoot with a sniper rifle.
SNIPE, verb. (intransitive) To watch a timed online auction and place a winning bid at the last possible moment.
SNIPE, verb. (transitive) To nose (a log) to make it drag or slip easily in skidding.
SNIPE, noun. (slang) A cigarette butt.
SNIPE, noun. An animated promotional logo during a television show.
SNIPE, noun. A strip of copy announcing some late breaking news or item of interest, typically placed in a print advertisement in such a way that it stands out from the ad.
SNIPE, noun. A bottle of wine measuring 0.1875 liters, one fourth the volume of a standard bottle; a quarter bottle or piccolo.
SNIPE, noun. A sharp, clever answer; sarcasm.
SNIPE, verb. (intransitive) To make malicious, underhand remarks or attacks.
SNIPE HUNT, noun. (idiomatic) A prank in which a gullible victim is sent off on a fruitless search for a nonexistent item.
SNIPE HUNT, verb. (intransitive) To participate, as the gullible victim, in a snipe hunt.
SNIPE HUNTS, noun. Plural of snipe hunt

Dictionary definition

SNIPE, noun. Old or New World straight-billed game bird of the sandpiper family; of marshy areas; similar to the woodcocks.
SNIPE, noun. A gunshot from a concealed location.
SNIPE, verb. Hunt or shoot snipe.
SNIPE, verb. Aim and shoot with great precision.
SNIPE, verb. Attack in speech or writing; "The editors of the left-leaning paper attacked the new House Speaker".

Wise words

Words, like nature, half reveal and half conceal the soul within.
Alfred Lord Tennyson