Definitions For Snape
Verb
To injure; of snow or sleet: nip, afflict To rebuke; revile, criticizeRelated terms
References
Middle English Dictionary, snaipen, snaip, snapeEtymology 1
Origin obscure. Perhaps from snape, a dialectal variant of sneap, , to nip, bite, pinch. More at sneap.Verb
(nautical, shipbuilding) To bevel the end of a timber to fit against an inclined surface.Etymology 2
From Middle English snaipen, t=to injure; of sleet or snow: to nip; to criticize, rebuke, revile, from ,, noformat=1, id=183007, date=December 2021 from , *snubaną, t=to cut; to snap; further origin unknown. .Verb
(transitive) To check#verb, check or curtail (the growth of something); also, to check or curtail the growth of (a plant#noun, plant, etc.). 1861, Terry A. Johnston, Him on One Side and Me on the Other, Univ. of South Carolina Press, p48, 1999 (quoting ) : The colnel (sic) I dont think like him much. I undirstand (sic) he was always snaping him. (intransitive) To chide, to rebuke, to reprimand.Anagrams
Aspen, NAPEs, Panes, Spean, aspen, napes, neaps, panes, peans, sneap, spane, speanMiddle English
Alternative forms
snaip, snaipenEtymology
From .Is Snape a Scrabble Word?
Words With Friends
NO
Scrabble US
NO
Scrabble UK
NO
English International (SOWPODS)
NO
Scrabble Global
NO
Enable1 Dictionary
NO
Points in Different Games
Scrabble
7
Words with Friends
9
The word Snape is worth 7 points in Scrabble and 9 points in Words with Friends
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