Verb
he snickered at the puzzled look on her face Noun
a snicker of derision when we heard their offer on the house
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Verb
This reporter is old enough to remember being a young lad, watching trailers before a different feature, seeing the first coming attraction for Die Hard and hearing the audience snicker at the concept of David Addison as the next Rambo.—Jordan Hoffman, EW.com, 31 May 2025 The club’s gradual demise after the retirement of their legendary manager Sir Alex Ferguson in 2013 has led to snickering from fans and jeering by rivals.—Alex Tabet, NBC news, 20 May 2025
Noun
The carnage leads to a sigh of an epilogue that seems, without giving anything away, like a curious letdown, a cruel little snicker from Aster that doesn’t entirely satisfy.—Randy Myers, Mercury News, 15 July 2025 League sources stifle their snickers in public while privately marveling at the owner’s ceaseless stupidity.
3.—Jeff Howe, The Athletic, 24 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for snicker
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