Synonym: arrogant, haughty, priggish. Similar words: rubbish, snob, hobbing, sobbing, throbbing, bishop, refurbish, rabbi. Meaning: ['snɑbɪʃ /'sbɒb-] adj. befitting or characteristic of those who incline to social exclusiveness and who rebuff the advances of people considered inferior.
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1. My brother is very snobbish about cars.
2. She's much too snobbish to stay at that plain hotel.
3. They had a snobbish dislike for their intellectual and social inferiors.
4. Her family seems snobbish.
5. He accused her of being snobbish and emotionally inhibited.
6. Aunt Harriet was very rich and very snobbish.
7. I would have been insufferably snobbish and complacent.
8. She knew it was snobbish, that she was just like any other package holiday-maker.
9. Some people find her snobbish, but she's really just shy.
10. She mocks the snobbish, hypocritical and materialistic views of many people and their narrow views.
11. Pip now falls into a snobbish habit of connecting high social status with moral superiority.
12. Snobbish Rufus had not thought it possible for some one like that to live there, but why not, after all?
13. Snobbish home-owners are protesting about a refugee family moving into their street.
14. Am I naive or snobbish in thinking that better standards ought to be enforced by the employers?
15. He found the Etonians snobbish, shallow, seemingly unprepared for the world as it was being transformed by the war.
16. She's very snobbish about people who live in the suburbs.
17. Some of my friends thought I was snobbish to come here, because they charge tuition and everything.
18. How to get a confidant in this snobbish practical society?
19. There should be no snobbish mockery of catering or fashion design as university subjects.
20. There he stands, the snobbish, educated, petty bourgeois, an utter coward, soaked from head to foot with distrust and contempt for the masses.
21. We thought this rather a joke but his concern was academic, not snobbish.
22. I don't like her new friends - they're a snobbish lot.
23. Modest, kind or optimistic people often smile more than snobbish, unkind or pessimistic people. Dr T.P.Chia
24. It was a hangout of the privileged classes, smug, snobbish, and perfectly content to remain small.
25. He does not think much of the Midwest, which he calls a backward, dumb but snobbish place.
26. He was a cheapskate of Scroogelike dimensions, vengeful and snobbish.
26. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and create good sentences.
27. To non - Bostonian Americans, the Brathmins have seemed both snobbish and parochial, too pleased with themselves.
28. When I say this, I feel me like a snobbish flunky .
29. The motive behind such words is austere rather than snobbish.
30. The poem continues effortlessly through hundreds of lines as well turned and snobbish as the famous.