SNAIL


Meaning of SNAIL in English

I. ˈsnāl, esp before pause or consonant -āəl noun

( -s )

Usage: often attributive

Etymology: Middle English, from Old English snægl, snægel; akin to Old Saxon snegil snail, Middle High German snegel, Old High German snecko snail, snahhan to creep, Old Norse snigill snail, Old Irish snaighim I creep, Lithuanian snãke snail; basic meaning: to creep

1. : a freshwater or marine or terrestrial gastropod mollusk especially when having an external enclosing spiral shell — see brown snail , edible snail , garden snail , land snail , violet snail ; compare limpet , pteropod , slug

2. : a slow-moving or sluggish person or thing : one lacking in energy or activity

3. : something suggesting a snail shell: as

a. : a snail clover or its pod — often used in plural

b. or snail wheel : a spiral or volute-shaped cam (as in a watch)

II. verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

intransitive verb

: to move, act, or go slowly or lazily

the train snailed up the steep grade

transitive verb

1. : to form in or mark with a spiral — used chiefly in horology

2. : to spend (time) like a snail or drone

III. noun

Etymology: probably by folk etymology

obsolete : chenille 1

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.