| snuff | inhale, breathe in through the nose; sniff, smell; examine by smelling (as of animals); inhale snuff; destroy; extinguish; cut off the burned end of a candle wick | en | (fiil) | en |
| snuff | act of inhaling, breathing in; sound made when breathing in; powdered tobacco that is inhaled through the nose; burnt end of a candle wick | en | (isim) | en |
| snuff | sniff or smell inquiringly snuff colored; grayish to yellowish brown | en | en |
| snuff | finely powdered tobacco for sniffing up the nose a pinch of smokeless tobacco inhaled at a single time the charred portion of a candlewick inhale audibly through the nose; "snuff coke" | en | en |
| snuff | Resentment, displeasure, or contempt, expressed by a snuffing of the nose | en | en |
| snuff | Pulverized tobacco, etc | en | en |
| snuff | prepared to be taken into the nose; also, the amount taken at once | en | en |
| snuff | The act of snuffing; perception by snuffing; a sniff | en | en |
| snuff | To inhale air through the nose with violence or with noise, as do dogs and horses | en | en |
| snuff | To turn up the nose and inhale air, as an expression of contempt; hence, to take offense | en | en |
| snuff | To crop the snuff of, as a candle; to take off the end of the snuff of | en | en |
| snuff | To draw in, or to inhale, forcibly through the nose; to sniff | en | en |
| snuff | To perceive by the nose; to scent; to smell | en | en |
| snuff | The part of a candle wick charred by the flame, whether burning or not | en | en |
| snuff | Snuff is powdered tobacco which people take by breathing it in quickly through their nose | en | en |
| snuff | If someone snuffs it, they die. He thought he was about to snuff it | en | en |
| snuff | Up to snuff Wide awake, knowing, sharp; not easily taken in or imposed upon; alive to scent (Dutch, snuffen, to scent, snuf; Danish, snöfte) Took it in snuff - in anger, in huff “You'll mar the light by taking it in snuff ” Shakespeare: Love's Labour's Lost, v 2 “Who, when it next came there, took it in snuff ”- Shakespeare: 1 Henry IV , i 3 Snuff Out He was snuffed out - put down, eclipsed The allusion is to a candle snuffed with snuffers | en | en |
| snuff | the charred portion of a candlewick | en | en |
| snuff | a pinch of smokeless tobacco inhaled at a single time | en | en |
| snuff | finely powdered tobacco for sniffing up the nose | en | en |
| snuff | sensing an odor by inhaling through the nose | en | en |
| snuff | sniff or smell inquiringly | en | en |
| snuff | inhale audibly through the nose; "snuff coke" | en | en |
| snuff | snuff colored; grayish to yellowish brown | en | en |
| snuff | Up to snuff Wide awake, knowing, sharp; not easily taken in or imposed upon; alive to scent (Dutch, snuffen, to scent, snuf; Danish, snöfte) Took it in snuff - in anger, in huff “You'll mar the light by taking it in snuff ” Shakespeare: Love's Labour's Lost, v 2 “Who, when it next came there, took it in snuff ”- Shakespeare: 1 Henry IV , i 3 Snuff Out He was snuffed out - put down, eclipsed The allusion is to a candle snuffed with snuffers | en | en |
| snuff | powdered tobacco for inhaling through nose | en | en |