different between snack vs scroggin
snack
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /snæk/
- Rhymes: -æk
Etymology 1
From Middle Dutch snacken (“to snack”).
Noun
snack (plural snacks)
- A light meal.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:meal
- An item of food eaten between meals.
- (slang) A very sexy and attractive person.
- 2008, Scott Sherman, First You Fall: A Kevin Connor Mystery, Alyson Publications:
- Up close, he was a total snack. “That was pretty slick.” “Well.” He cocked his head, “I'm a pretty slick guy.” “I'm Kevin,” I said. “Romeo,” he put out his hand. “You're kidding.”
- 2019, Loy A. Webb, The Light, Concord Theatricals (?ISBN), page 22:
- You were looking like a snack. I was looking like a snack. We were finally going to do what two snacks do... I immediately went into my routine. Covers on. Lights off. But you Mr. Tate...you softly grabbed my hand, kissed it, and turned the lights back on.
- 2020, Gena Showalter, Prince of Stone, HQN Books (?ISBN):
- Her confusion amped up. But so did her attraction. He was a total snack.
- 2008, Scott Sherman, First You Fall: A Kevin Connor Mystery, Alyson Publications:
Alternative forms
- (attractive person): snacc
Derived terms
Translations
See also
- munchies
- fast food
- takeaway
Verb
snack (third-person singular simple present snacks, present participle snacking, simple past and past participle snacked)
- To eat a light meal.
- To eat between meals.
Derived terms
- snack down
Translations
Etymology 2
See snatch (transitive verb). Ultimately of the same origin as the word under Etymology 1, but perhaps through a different source.
Noun
snack (plural snacks)
- (obsolete) A share; a part or portion.
Verb
snack (third-person singular simple present snacks, present participle snacking, simple past and past participle snacked)
- (obsolete, transitive) To snatch.
- (obsolete, transitive) To bite.
- (obsolete, transitive) To share.
Anagrams
- nacks
Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from English snack, from Middle Dutch snacken (from which snakken).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sn?k/
Noun
snack m (plural snacks, diminutive snackje n)
- snack
Derived terms
- snackbar
Verb
snack
- first-person singular present indicative of snacken
- imperative of snacken
French
Etymology
From English snack, from Middle Dutch snacken.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /snak/
Noun
snack m (plural snacks)
- snack bar
Synonyms
- snack-bar
Further reading
- “snack” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Spanish
Etymology
Borrowed from English.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?snak/, [?znak]
- IPA(key): /es?nak/, [ez?nak]
Noun
snack m (plural snacks)
- snack
Swedish
Etymology
Nominalization of snacka (“to chat, to talk”).
Pronunciation
Noun
snack n (uncountable)
- (colloquial) talk, speech
Declension
Related terms
- snacka
Derived terms
- snackis
- skitsnack
- snicksnack
snack From the web:
- what snacks can i eat on keto
- what snack should i eat
- what snacks are good for diabetics
- what snacks are gluten free
- what snacks are vegan
- what snack was invented at disneyland
- what snack do i want
- what snacks can you eat with braces
scroggin
English
Pronunciation
Noun
scroggin (uncountable)
- (Australia, New Zealand) A pre-prepared mixture of dried fruit and nuts to eat as a snack while bushwalking.
- 2010, Charles Rawlings-Way, Brett Atkinson, New Zealand, Lonely Planet, page 76,
- And don?t forget your scroggin – a mixture of dried fruit and nuts (and sometimes chocolate) for munching en route.
- 2010, Warwick Sprawson, The Overland Track: Cradle Mountiain to Lake St Clair, Red Dog Books, Australia, page 179,
- Trail mix or ‘Scroggin’, is a mix of dried fruit, nuts and sometimes chocolate that?s popular with hikers.
- 2010, Charles Rawlings-Way, Brett Atkinson, New Zealand, Lonely Planet, page 76,
Synonyms
- (food for bushwalking): gorp, trail mix
scroggin From the web:
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