SNARL


Meaning of SNARL in English

snarl /snɑːl $ snɑːrl/ BrE AmE verb

[ Sense 1-2: Date: 1500-1600 ; Origin: snar 'to snarl' (1500-1600) , from the sound. ]

[ Sense 3: Date: 1300-1400 ; Origin: snarl 'net for catching things' (14-19 centuries) , from ⇨ ↑ snare 1 ]

1 . [intransitive] if an animal snarls, it makes a low angry sound and shows its teeth ⇨ growl

snarl at

The dog growled and snarled at me.

2 . [intransitive and transitive] to speak or say something in a nasty, angry way:

‘Shut up,’ he snarled.

3 . [transitive usually passive] ( also snarl up British English ) to prevent traffic from moving:

The traffic was snarled up on both sides of the road.

—snarl noun [countable] :

an angry snarl

• • •

THESAURUS

■ different ways of saying something

▪ whisper to say something very quietly, using your breath rather than your full voice:

‘Don’t wake the baby,’ Jenny whispered.

▪ mumble to say something quietly without pronouncing the words clearly:

He mumbled his thanks.

▪ mutter to say something quietly, especially when you are annoyed but do not want someone to hear you complaining:

‘This is ridiculous,’ he muttered under his breath.

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She muttered something about having to go home early.

▪ murmur to say something in a soft slow gentle voice:

She stroked his hair and murmured, ‘Don’t worry. You’ll be all right.’

▪ growl to say something in a low angry voice:

‘As I was saying,’ Lewis growled, ‘it needs to be finished today.’

▪ snarl to say something in a nasty angry way:

‘Get out of my way!’ he snarled.

▪ exclaim to say something suddenly and loudly:

‘How beautiful!’ she exclaimed.

▪ blurt out to suddenly say something without thinking, especially something embarrassing or secret:

It was partly nervousness that had made him blurt out the question.

▪ stammer/stutter to speak with a lot of pauses and repeated sounds, because you have a speech problem, or because you are nervous or excited:

‘I’ll, I’ll only be a m-moment,’ he stammered.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.