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Sniff   /snɪf/   Listen
verb
Sniff  v. t.  
1.
To draw in with the breath through the nose; as, to sniff the air of the country.
2.
To perceive as by sniffing; to snuff, to scent; to smell; as, to sniff danger.



Sniff  v. i.  (past & past part. sniffed or snift; pres. part. sniffing)  To draw air audibly up the nose; to snuff; sometimes done as a gesture of suspicion, offense, or contempt. "So ye grow squeamish, gods, and sniff at heaven."



noun
Sniff  n.  The act of sniffing; perception by sniffing; that which is taken by sniffing; as, a sniff of air.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sniff" Quotes from Famous Books



... these are not the only kinds of thraldom. Thou who walkest in a vain show, looking out with ornamental dilettante sniff and serene supremacy at all Life and all Death; and amblest jauntily; perking up thy poor talk into crotchets, thy poor conduct into fatuous somnambulisms;—and art as an 'enchanted Ape' under God's sky, where thou mightest have been a man, had ...
— Past and Present - Thomas Carlyle's Collected Works, Vol. XIII. • Thomas Carlyle

... tried it," I told her, "if he'd known Cleary had you to look after him." That got me a much louder sniff and toss of the dark curly head, which broke up my plans ...
— The Trouble with Telstar • John Berryman

... sea. Like the picture of some forbidden thing was that glint of blue, framed by the green slopes and the sky above. He could see the whitecaps, the dancing glimmer of the sun, and the gray sea gulls that whirled and hovered and dipped before his longing gaze. He would lift his head to sniff the salt breeze that swept through the cleft in the hills, and to listen for that far-off thunder that could sometimes be heard as the great waves broke on the beach. At last, one day when he had sat so long with his friend that dusk was falling and the stars were coming out, he broke ...
— The Windy Hill • Cornelia Meigs

... and sniff and handkerchief, And dim and decorous mirth, With ham and sherry, they'll meet to bury The lordliest ...
— The Collected Poems of Rupert Brooke • Rupert Brooke

... One sniff at the neck of the bottle was enough to satisfy Christy, who was a practical temperance man of the very strictest kind, and he had never drank a glass of anything intoxicating in all his life. The bottle contained "apple-jack," or apple-brandy, the vilest fluid that ever passed ...
— A Victorious Union - SERIES: The Blue and the Gray--Afloat • Oliver Optic


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