Gnit vs Snit - What's the difference?
gnit | snit |
A temper; a lack of patience; a bad mood.
A U.S. unit of volume for liquor equal to 2 jiggers, 3 U.S. fluid ounces, or 88.7 milliliters.
(US, dialect) A beer chaser commonly served in three-ounce servings in highball or juice glasses with a Bloody Mary cocktail in the upper midwest states of United States including Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, Michigan, and Illinois.
As nouns the difference between gnit and snit
is that gnit is a gnat while snit is .snit
English
Noun
(en noun)- He's in a snit because he got passed over for promotion.
- The bartender served us each a snit with our Bloody Marys this morning.