different between snirt vs smirt
snirt
English
Etymology 1
Verb
snirt (third-person singular simple present snirts, present participle snirting, simple past and past participle snirted)
- (Scotland) To give a suppressed laugh or sharp intake of breath.
- 1833, Anonymous, writing in The Dublin University Magazine: A Literary and Political Journal, page 575, "Willie and Pate" :
- "He grins, and snirts, and thraws ye ken — / I maist could die, wi' laughin."
- 1837, James Hogg, "Katie Cheyne" in Tales and Sketches, page 172:
- "But ye see there was a great deal of blushing and snirting, and bits of made coughs, as if to keep down a thorough guffau."
- 1871, William Black, A daughter of Heth: A novel, page 160:
- The Whaup grew very red in the face, and 'snirted' with laughter."
- 1833, Anonymous, writing in The Dublin University Magazine: A Literary and Political Journal, page 575, "Willie and Pate" :
Noun
snirt (plural snirts)
- (Scotland) A suppressed laugh; a sharp intake of breath.
See also
- snirtle
Etymology 2
Blend of snow +? dirt
Noun
snirt (uncountable)
- (Canada, US) Snow that is dirty, often seen by the side of roads and parking lots that have been plowed.
- 1975, United States House Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture and Related Agencies, Agriculture and Related Agencies Appropriations for 1976, page 175 [1]:
- We then have what we call 'snirt' storms.
- 1985, United States House Committee on Agriculture, General Farm Bill of 1985: Hearings Before the Committee on Agriculture, page 924 [2]:
- Snirt or a mixture of snow and dirt is the term popularly applied to the windrows of dirt along the roads during a Minnesota winter.
- 1997, William S. Burroughs, Last Words, Grove Press, page 73, ?ISBN:
- 'Snirt' is a thing of the spring.
- 2004, Dean Norman, Studio Cards: Funny Greeting Cards and People Who Created Them, Trafford Publishing, ?ISBN, page 131:
- […] it wasn't a hard winter. Only a couple of blizzards and snirt and snuss storms.
- 1975, United States House Committee on Appropriations Subcommittee on Agriculture and Related Agencies, Agriculture and Related Agencies Appropriations for 1976, page 175 [1]:
Derived terms
- snirty
Anagrams
- NRTIs
snirt From the web:
- snirt what does it mean
- what is snirt run
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smirt
English
Etymology
Blend of smoke +? flirt. Apparently coined in Ireland following ban on smoking in pubs.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /sm??(?)t/
Verb
smirt (third-person singular simple present smirts, present participle smirting, simple past and past participle smirted)
- (intransitive, Britain, Ireland) To arrange dates while smoking outside a pub. [from 2004]
Anagrams
- TRIMs, Trims, strim, trims
smirt From the web:
- what skirt size am i
- what skirts are in style for 2021
- what skirt steak
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- what skirt length is appropriate for work
- what skirts to wear for body type
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