/snaʊt/, /snʌʊt/
OriginFrom Middle English snowte, snout, snute, from Old English *snūt, from Proto-West Germanic *snūt, from Proto-Germanic *snūtaz.
Compare Saterland Frisian Snuute (“snout”), West Frisian snút (“snout”), Dutch snuit or snoet (“snout; cute face”), German Low German Snuut (“snout”), German Schnauze, Schnute (“snout”). Doublet of snoot.
- The long, projecting nose, mouth, and jaw of a beast, as of pigs.
“The pig rooted around in the dirt with its snout.”
- The front of the prow of a ship or boat.
“The dinghy was trailing astern at the end of its painter, and Merrion looked at it as he passed. He saw that it was a battered-looking affair of the prahm type, with a blunt snout, and like the parent”
- The nozzle of a pipe, hose, etc.
“If you place the snout right into the bucket, it won't spray as much.”
- The anterior prolongation of the head of a gastropod; a rostrum.
- The anterior prolongation of the head of weevils and allied beetles; a rostrum.
- British, slangTobacco; cigarettes.
“(Bob, p. 55:) Charlie was the most vicious screw on the block ... He caught me with the two ounces of snout right in my hand, caught me by the hair, and swung me round in the exercise yard ...
(Spider”
“LIZ. I only got one left. / FRED (calls). Get us some snout. / MIKE. Five or ten?”
“Also he was "doing his nut" for some "snout." I said I would provide cigarettes.”
- The terminus of a glacier.
- slangA police informer.
- A butterfly in the nymphalid subfamily Libytheinae, notable for the snout-like elongation on their heads.
- To furnish with a nozzle or point.
Formssnouts(plural) · snouts(present, singular, third-person) · snouting(participle, present) · snouted(participle, past) · snouted(past)