Snitz vs Snit - What's the difference?
snitz | snit |
(US, dialect, transitive) To slice.
* 2007 , Harry W. Rutt, Back porch memories (page 82)
* 2009 , Linda Egenes, Visits with the Amish: Impressions of the Plain Life (page 72)
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 a verb snitz
is (us|dialect|transitive) to slice.As a noun snit is
.snitz
English
Verb
(es)- We snitzed and canned 56 quarts of pears by two o'clock.
- Children look forward to apple snitzing , a festive fall event when neighbors gather to make apple cider at a community press.
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.
