sneerful
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈsnɪə(ɹ)fʊl/, /ˈsnɪə(ɹ)fəl/
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈsnɪɹfʊl/, /ˈsnɪɹfəl/
- Rhymes: -ɪə(ɹ)fəl, -ɪə(ɹ)fʊl
Adjective
[edit]sneerful (comparative more sneerful, superlative most sneerful)
- Given to sneering.
- 1771, William Shenstone, The Poetical Works of Wm. Shenstone Esq, page 210:
- Cell ever squalid where the sneerful maid Will not fatigue her hand!
- 1928, Helen Reimensnyder Martin, The Lie, page 175:
- Whenever I find myself feeling sneerful, I just remind myself, 'But there's Jaro — intelligent and kind and strong.'
- 1930, Harold Courtenay Armstrong, Turkey and Syria reborn: a record of two years of travel, page 78:
- My restless, itchy Syrian companion was rolling a cigarette beside me, making some observation futile and sneerful as usual.
- 1944, Edith Pope, Colcorton, page 193:
- Abby could tell by his voice that he wasn't in his sneerful humour but was friendly drunk.
- Expressing contempt.
- 1951, Where Town Begins, page 6:
- He stood for a few seconds looking after the car, on his lips a sneerful smile.
- 1972, Douglas Hayes, A player's hide, page 114:
- Caspar Cass's Comedy Players at the Winter Garden, an ash-blonde girl said to a tall thin man with a sneerful face.
- 1972, May Hill Arbuthnot, Zena Sutherland, Children and Books, page 656:
- Not that you do actually sneer, of course — that is stage business, not storytelling—but still a sneerful suggestion undoubtedly creeps in.
- 2005, Ronald J. Sider, The Scandal of the Evangelical Conscience:
- Satan must laugh in sneerful derision.