Snuff vs Enuff - What's the difference?
snuff | enuff |
Finely]] [[grind, ground or pulverized tobacco intended for use by being sniffed or snorted into the nose.
Fine-ground or minced tobacco, dry or moistened, intended for use by placing a pinch behind the lip or beneath the tongue; see also snus.
* 1896 , Universal Dictionary of the English Language :
A snort or sniff of fine-ground, powdered, or pulverized tobacco.
The act of briskly inhaling by the nose; a sniff, a snort.
Resentment or skepticism expressed by quickly drawing air through the nose; snuffling; sniffling.
(obsolete) Snot, mucus.
(obsolete) Smell, scent, odour.
To inhale through the nose.
* Dryden
*
To turn up the nose and inhale air, as an expression of contempt; hence, to take offence.
* Bishop Hall
The burning part of a candle wick, or the black, burnt remains of a wick (which has to be periodically removed).
*, II.3.3:
* Jonathan Swift
(obsolete) Leavings in a glass after drinking; heel-taps.
(attributive) Pertaining to a form of pornographic film which involves someone's actually being murdered.
To extinguish a candle or oil-lamp flame by covering the burning end of the wick until the flame is suffocated.
(obsolete) To trim the burnt part of a candle wick.
* 1817 , , Northanger Abbey , [http://books.google.com/books?id=9QQ9AAAAYAAJ&dq=%22snuffed%20and%20extinguished%20in%20one%22&pg=PA205#v=onepage&q=snuffed&f=false]:
(slang) To kill a person; to snuff out.
(informal) Simplified variant of enough.
:* {{quote-book
, year=2007
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, author=Glenda Crosling, Glenda Marian Crosling, Elizabeth Thomas, Margaret Heagney
, title=Improving Student Retention in Higher Education
, chapter=Case 2
:* {{quote-book
, year=2009
, year_published=
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, editor=
, author=Samaro Kamboureli
, title=Scandalous Bodies: Diasporic Literature in English Canada
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As a noun snuff
is finely ground or pulverized tobacco intended for use by being sniffed or snorted into the nose.As a verb snuff
is to inhale through the nose.As a determiner enuff is
simplified variant of enough.snuff
English
Etymology 1
Related to .Noun
- Dry snuffs' are often adulterated with quicklime, and moist ' snuffs , as rappee, with ammonia, hellebore, pearl-ash, etc.
Derived terms
* up to snuffVerb
(en verb)- He snuffs the wind, his heels the sand excite.
- Napoleon paced to and fro in silence, occasionally snuffing at the ground.
- Do the enemies of the church rage and snuff ?
Etymology 2
Origin uncertain.Noun
(-)- his memory stinks like the snuff of a candle when it is put out […].
- If the burning snuff happens to get out of the snuffers, you have a chance that it may fall into a dish of soup.
Derived terms
* snuff-dish * snuff film * snuff movie * snuffterVerb
(en verb)- The dimness of the light her candle emitted made her turn to it in alarm; but there was no danger of its sudden extinction, it had yet some hours to burn; and that she might not have any greater difficulty in distinguishing the writing than what its ancient date might occasion, she hastily snuffed' it. Alas! it was ' snuffed and extinguished in one.
Derived terms
* snuffer * snuff it * snuff outenuff
English
Determiner
(en determiner)citation, genre=Education , publisher=Taylor & Francis , isbn=9780415399203 , page=38 , passage=How much is enuff rope? }}
citation, genre= , publisher=Wilfrid Laurier Univ. Press , isbn=9781554580644 , page=157 , passage=The double spelling of enough/enuff signals the poem's double talking, … }}
