Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of snark.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word snarks.

Examples

  • One important characteristic of good snarks is that they be either factually correct, or at least factually ambiguous.

    Matthew Yglesias » Maybe We Can Call Them “Ponies” 2007

  • I tracked these water bodies-within-bodies and dubbed them "snarks" because of their elusiveness.

    How Far Will the Gulf Gusher Spread? Curtis C. Ebbesmeyer 2010

  • In all honesty, my above "snarks" are nothing more than a retort to the original use of the word "bogus".

    Techdirt 2009

  • In all honesty, my above "snarks" are nothing more than a retort to the original use of the word "bogus".

    Techdirt 2009

  • Mr. Jay kind of snarks at them while asking if they're nervous.

    SportSquee 2008

  • "But you're not going to repeal it," Wallace snarks.

    TV SoundOff: Sunday Talking Heads Jason Linkins 2011

  • On a night of glittery hype where so little feels authentic — although I do believe Glee's Chris Colfer was truly and wonderfully stunned by his win — the gasps in the ballroom at some of Gervais' most shockingly irreverent snarks were the real thing.

    Roush Review: Gervais the Golden Viper 2011

  • There is much more debate about this collective illusion now - just witness the rise in aid blogs and aid snarks and aid transparency initiatives.

    Dennis Whittle: Ben Ramalingam on Aid and Complexity Dennis Whittle 2011

  • News & World Report, which snarks, "When it comes to being tone deaf on Catholic-Jewish relations, this pope wins Olympic gold"?

    Interreligious Dialogue 2009

  • "But you're not going to repeal it," Wallace snarks.

    TV SoundOff: Sunday Talking Heads Jason Linkins 2011

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.