snuffy

Example Sentences

Recent Examples of Synonyms for snuffy
Adjective
  • Cold exposure is particularly helpful for those who have irritable skin through the constriction of blood vessels, alleviating swelling and flushes.
    Lucy Notarantonio, Newsweek, 24 Feb. 2025
  • The elderly single mom, played with an irritable, bone-deep bitterness by Irish actor Fiona Shaw, has spent the past few years paralyzed by an illness no one can diagnose.
    Peter Debruge, Variety, 14 Feb. 2025
Adjective
  • In the Nineties, the report became a staple in the bilious feedstock of right-wing militias, part of a slurry of propaganda that turned legitimate grievances into the conviction that FEMA agents in unmarked black helicopters were soon to enact a new world order.
    Dan Piepenbring, Harper's Magazine, 19 Feb. 2025
  • The death chamber is nine feet by twelve feet, painted a bilious turquoise.
    Lawrence Wright, The New Yorker, 10 Feb. 2025
Adjective
  • The best picture-winning boxing drama paired up-and-coming boxer Maggie (Hilary Swank) with grumpy reluctant coach Frankie (Clint Eastwood).
    Brian Truitt, USA TODAY, 28 Feb. 2025
  • The pair meet after the guy picks up a prescription for an extremely gnarly black eye, setting off a whirlwind romance that’s inevitably disrupted by — what else? — a grumpy parent.
    Jon Blistein, Rolling Stone, 21 Feb. 2025
Adjective
  • Named Lija, the wary but winsome mutt — in fact played by the filmmaker’s own pet — is snappish and defensive when her wounds are first treated, only to slowly relent and relax in the face of genuine tenderness.
    Guy Lodge, Variety, 6 Feb. 2025
  • The film’s co-star, Diane Kruger, plays several roles, notably Karsh’s late wife (seen in flashback) and her snappish veterinarian-turned-dog-groomer sister.
    Owen Gleiberman, Variety, 20 May 2024
Adjective
  • Now, for many in the business world, that question feels almost passé, part of an earlier, more fretful era of narratives.
    Talmon Joseph Smith, New York Times, 9 Jan. 2025
  • As Queenie, navigating empty relationships and professional disappointments on a journey from self-sabotage to self-worth, Brown makes a whole person from a variety of attitudes — hopeful, hopeless, hungover, exuberant, fretful, thoughtful.
    Robert Lloyd, Los Angeles Times, 3 Dec. 2024
Adjective
  • Rojas’s recollections weren’t peevish—fine work was produced under these conditions.
    Ian Parker, The New Yorker, 20 Jan. 2025
  • The songs are muscular and syncretic as ever, but the normally peevish rapper doesn’t maintain his trolling energy for the full record, settling into a questioning and pensive pace.
    Stephen Kearse, TIME, 8 Dec. 2024
Adjective
  • And Bellingham has become a petulant bore in terms of his ego and mouth.
    Guillermo Rai, The Athletic, 16 Feb. 2025
  • The male characters are, typically, petulant narcissists with perpetual sneers who insult and cajole their female love interests into almost invariably unhealthy relationships.
    Josh Bell, Vulture, 13 Feb. 2025
Adjective
  • These irascible fish live on the intertidal mudflats of Roebuck Bay in Broome, Western Australia.
    Cecilia Rodriguez, Forbes, 24 Feb. 2025
  • Others, like his irascible Celebrity Jeopardy standout Sean Connery, are the uncanny product of masterful tinkering, with Hammond eventually stretching the real and the perceived into a shape as recognizable as the actual figure himself.
    Dennis Perkins, EW.com, 16 Feb. 2025
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

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Cite this Entry

“Snuffy.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/snuffy. Accessed 14 Mar. 2025.

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