Haettu sana löytyi näillä lähdekielillä:
| Käännös | Konteksti |
|---|
| Verbit |
| 1. | | |
| 2. | | |
| 3. | | |
| Substantiivit |
| 4. | | puhekieli, Australia, arkikielessä |
| 5. | | |
| 6. | | |
| 7. | | |
| 8. | | |
| 9. | | |
| 10. | | kuvaannollinen |
| 11. | | |
| 12. | | slangi |
Määritelmät
Substantiivit
- A stump or base of a branch that has been lopped off; a short branch, or a sharp or rough branch; a knot; a protuberance.
- (UK, dialect, obsolete) A light meal.
- A misnaged, an opponent to Chassidic Judaism (more likely modern, for cultural reasons).
- Any sharp protuberant part of an object, which may catch, scratch, or tear other objects brought into contact with it.
- (Australia, informal, colloquial) A sausage.
- A tooth projecting beyond the rest; a broken or decayed tooth.
- A tree, or a branch of a tree, fixed in the bottom of a river or other navigable water, and rising nearly or quite to the surface, by which boats are sometimes pierced and sunk.
- (figuratively) A problem or difficulty with something.
- A pulled thread or yarn, as in cloth.
- One of the secondary branches of an antler.
Verbit
- To catch or tear (e.g. fabric) upon a rough surface or projection.
- (fishing) To fish by means of dragging a large hook or hooks on a line, intending to impale the body (rather than the mouth) of the target.
- (slang) To obtain or pick up (something).
- (UK, dialect) To cut the snags or branches from, as the stem of a tree; to hew roughly.
Esimerkit
- The coat of arms / Now on a naked snag in triumph borne.
- Be careful not to snag your stockings on that concrete bench!
- We snagged for spoonbill from the eastern shore of the Mississippi river.
- Ella snagged a bottle of water from the fridge before leaving for her jog.
- I fire up the barbie and start cooking snags.
- ‘You can get the chooks and snags from the fridge if you want,’ he replied.
- I smiled, remembering my bewilderment upon receiving exactly the same command at my very first barbecue back in Sydney a month after I′d first arrived.
- ‘Hungry? We′ve got plenty of roo,’ one of the men said as she walked up. He pointed with his spatula, ‘and pig snags, cow snags, beef and chicken.’
- She reached over me and snagged it.
Taivutusmuodot