Snob vs Spurn - What's the difference?
snob | spurn |
(colloquial) A cobbler or shoemaker.
* 1929 , (Frederic Manning), The Middle Parts of Fortune , Vintage 2014, p. 57:
(dated) A member of the lower classes; a commoner.
* 1844 , (Charles Dickens), Martin Chuzzlewit :
* 1913 , (Arthur Conan Doyle), The Poison Belt :
(informal) A person who wishes to be seen as a member of the upper classes and who looks down on those perceived to have inferior or unrefined tastes.
* 1958 , (Arnold Wesker), Roots :
(ambitransitive) To reject disdainfully; contemn; scorn.
* Shakespeare
* Shakespeare
* John Locke
To reject something by pushing it away with the foot.
* Shakespeare
To waste; fail to make the most of (an opportunity)
* {{quote-news
, year=2011
, date=September 28
, author=Tom Rostance
, title=Arsenal 2 - 1 Olympiakos
, work=BBC Sport
(obsolete) To kick or toss up the heels.
* Chaucer
* Gay
An act of spurning; a scornful rejection.
A kick; a blow with the foot.
* Milton
(obsolete) Disdainful rejection; contemptuous treatment.
* Shakespeare
A body of coal left to sustain an overhanging mass.
As nouns the difference between snob and spurn
is that snob is while spurn is an act of spurning; a scornful rejection.As a verb spurn is
(ambitransitive) to reject disdainfully; contemn; scorn.snob
English
Noun
(en noun) (wikipedia snob)- The snobs were also kind to him, and gave him a pair of boots which they assured him were of a type and quality reserved entirely for officers […].
- 'D'ye know a slap-up sort of button, when you see it?' said the youth. 'Don't look at mine, if you ain't a judge, because these lions' heads was made for men of men of taste: not snobs .'
- I tell you, sir, that I have a brain of my own, and that I should feel myself to be a snob and a slave if I did not use it.
- If wanting the best things in life means being a snob' then glory hallelujah I'm a ' snob .
Derived terms
* snobbery * snobbish * snobbyCoordinate terms
* posh * social climberAnagrams
* * ----spurn
English
Verb
(en verb)- to spurn at your most royal image
- What safe and nicely I might well delay / By rule of knighthood, I disdain and spurn .
- Domestics will pay a more cheerful service when they find themselves not spurned because fortune has laid them at their master's feet.
- I spurn thee like a cur out of my way.
citation, page= , passage=Marouane Chamakh then spurned a great chance to kill the game off when he ran onto Andrey Arshavin's lofted through ball but shanked his shot horribly across the face of goal.}}
- The miller spurned at a stone.
- The drunken chairman in the kennel spurns .
Derived terms
* spurnerNoun
(en noun)- What defence can properly be used in such a despicable encounter as this but either the slap or the spurn ?
- The insolence of office and the spurns / That patient merit of the unworthy takes.