释义 |
snatch I. \ˈsnach\ verb (-ed/-ing/-es) Etymology: Middle English snacchen, snecchen; akin to Middle Dutch snacken to snap at, bite, chatter, Middle Low German & Middle High German snacken to chatter, gossip, Old Norse snaka to sniff around, Norwegian snake to sniff around, snap at with the teeth intransitive verb 1. obsolete : to give a sudden snap (as in anger or attack) : make a snappish attack 2. : to attempt to seize something suddenly by or as if by snapping : catch at something — often used with at < snatch at a rope > transitive verb 1. : to take or grasp abruptly or hastily : seize (something) hurriedly or in passing < snatch a pen > < snatched the first opportunity > < snatching a glance at his friend > often : to seize or grab suddenly without permission, ceremony, due process, or legal or moral right : steal, win, or otherwise gain irregularly when catching another unawares < snatch a kiss > < snatching victory from defeat > 2. a. : to remove with suddenness (as by pulling, tearing, concealing, rescuing) — often used with away or off < snatch off his burning clothes > b. : to remove by death < snatched from the bosom of his family > 3. : to insert (a rope) in a snatch block 4. : to catch (a fish) by intentionally hooking the body rather than the mouth Synonyms: see take • - snatch one bald-headed II. noun (-es) Etymology: Middle English snacche, from snecchen, snacchen, v. 1. obsolete : trap, snare 2. : a snatching at or of something : a quick catching or grabbing: as a. : a lift in which the weight is raised from the floor to the overhead position in one rapid motion — compare clean and jerk, press b. slang (1) : kidnapping (2) : a demand for something (as money) — used chiefly in put the snatch on < put the snatch on him for a cut of the take > 3. : a snatched opportunity or period of time : an occasional period (as a moment or hour) < sleep only in snatches > < work by snatches > 4. : something (as a short period, spell, or stint, an excerpt from a song, a few bars of a melody, a fleeting glimpse, a disconnected portion of a story, a snack) as brief, fragmentary, or hurried as if snatched or done in snatched time < a snatch of spring in January > < sing snatches of old tunes > < you may have heard snatches of the story > 5. obsolete : something (as a way of speaking or an argument) with a catch 6. a. : snatch block b. : snatch hook 7. a. : vagina — usually considered vulgar b. : sexual intercourse — usually considered vulgar |