Befitting or characteristic of those who incline to social exclusiveness and who rebuff the advances of people considered inferior.
Sinônimos
Examples for "snobbish"
Examples for "snobbish"
1Also, what exactly is even snobbish about what President Obama originally said?
2She hated to subject any artist-howeverquestionable his talent-toGarek's snobbish sister.
3Behind the pair went an elderly couple, overdressed and snobbish in appearance.
4The impudent and snobbish subscriber who will address his victim as follows:-
5One is exclusive, snobbish, and narrow, the other is liberal and democratic.
1News International is an empire built on personal loyalty and clannish defiance.
2The others said we were clannish and stuck-up, but we didn't care.
3In 1811 the dead world of clannish localty was fresh in many memories.
4Leslie is clannish-herown could never do wrong in her eyes.
5Unless they all band together; those captains are a clannish lot.
1Can you spot which man would want to belong among clubby types?
2Featured vocalists transform a patchwork of urban electronics into clubby pop anthems.
3The clubby reminiscences will infuriate an awful lot of people this weekend.
4This sold-out tour of substantial, but still clubby, venues feels valedictory.
5There were fieldstone accents and rich rugs and clubby leather sofas and armchairs.
1They belonged to the same set, and no one was more cliquish than Freeman.
2And of course these were Iraqis-verycliquish, very clannish.
3Djuna Barnes seems to have acquired an odd, cliquish kind of fame largely because T.S.
4The German residents, as everywhere, are cliquish too.
5It was that confidence, he reckons, that helped Galvin find his spot in what was a notoriously cliquish dressing-room.
1Carriages, with servants in snobby coats, beset the doors of the theatre.
2Upper class didn't seem to suit them - it was too snobby.
3When I first considered listening to audiobooks, I was snobby about it.
4She was still pretty enough, he supposed, if you liked snobby bluebloods.
5He sounded so snobby sometimes that he sounded like a 1930s movie.
6This person was nasty to you and part of a snobby clique.
7A bit snobby about their own craftsmanship, if you ask me.' Elias shrugged.
8They were very snobby and very hostile towards the Greens, Ms Dann said.
9I've seen pictures! Then she laughed at how snobby this sounded.
10Therefore his supporters say that all criticism of him comes from a snobby media.
11We are going to be snobby about McDonalds today, I can hear you thinking.
12Guess they'll add an extra shot of smugness to their snobby coffee brews today.
13However, he wasn't a doormat, and this snobby player wasn't going to intimidate him.
14Some scientists can get a bit snobby about basic research.
15At times it's a bit snobby, but never less than listenable and frequently gripping.
16Marcel has a dry, deadpan and at times almost snobby charm that intrigued Zoe.