Associations to the word «Snub»
Noun
- Nose
- Pollard
- Holster
- Revolver
- Monkey
- Symmetry
- Caliber
- Barrel
- Pistol
- Colt
- Vertex
- Prism
- Beard
- Forehead
- Cube
- Hart
- Lloyd
- Nomination
- Permutation
- Magnum
- Millimeter
- Hugh
- Dual
- Panda
- Geometry
- Blaster
- Sichuan
- Yunnan
- Fan
- Rope
- Triangle
- Solid
- Bodyguard
- Coloring
- Myanmar
- Steer
- Cigarette
- Diagram
- Amp
- Owens
- Pentagon
- Saddle
- Thirty
- Jacket
- Trooper
- Ankle
- Slang
- Dart
- Tractor
- Cell
- Hitler
- Plane
- Rib
- Muzzle
- Enough
- Chin
- Liner
- Buck
- Felt
- Anchor
Adjective
Wiktionary
SNUB, adjective. Conspicuously short.
SNUB, adjective. (mathematics) (of a polyhedron) Derived from a simpler polyhedron by the addition of extra triangular faces.
SNUB, noun. A deliberate affront or slight.
SNUB, noun. A sudden checking of a cable or rope.
SNUB, noun. (obsolete) A knot; a protuberance; a snag.
SNUB, verb. (transitive) To slight, ignore or behave coldly toward someone.
SNUB, verb. (transitive) To turn down; to dismiss.
SNUB, verb. (transitive) To stub out (a cigarette etc).
SNUB, verb. (transitive) To halt the movement of a rope etc by turning it about a cleat or bollard etc; to secure a vessel in this manner.
SNUB, verb. (transitive) To clip or break off the end of; to check or stunt the growth of.
SNUB, verb. To sob with convulsions.
SNUB CUBE, noun. An Archimedean solid of 38 faces, including six squares (no two of which share a vertex) and 32 equilateral triangles.
SNUB CUBES, noun. Plural of snub cube
SNUB NOSE, noun. A nose that is short and turned upward at the tip.
Dictionary definition
SNUB, noun. An instance of driving away or warding off.
SNUB, noun. A refusal to recognize someone you know; "the snub was clearly intentional".
SNUB, verb. Refuse to acknowledge; "She cut him dead at the meeting".
SNUB, verb. Reject outright and bluntly; "She snubbed his proposal".
SNUB, adjective. Unusually short; "a snub nose".
Wise words
The chief virtue that language can have is clearness, and
nothing detracts from it so much as the use of unfamiliar
words.