Sentence examples for snarls from inspiring English sources

Suggestions(2)

The word 'snarls' is correct and commonly used in written English.
One can use 'snarls' to describe a tangled mess, a chaotic situation, or a fierce and threatening expression or sound made by an animal or person. Example 1: The power lines were snarled together after the storm, causing a widespread blackout in the city. Example 2: The traffic on the highway was snarled due to a major accident, causing long delays for commuters. Example 3: The dog snarled at the intruder, baring its sharp teeth and growling fiercely.

Dictionary

snarls

verb

Third person singular of snarl

Exact(60)

In the very first second of opener On Sight, you are left alone in a field of distortion, a squelch of 303ish acid that rolls up and down a scale before settling into a loop of abrasive snarls.

"I'm just a bitch with money and power … but I do make it look good," snarls Princess Eleanor at one point.

Waugh's satirical novel about the movie industry, the British expatriate community in Hollywood, the pet funeral business, and the sometimes ridiculous connections between the three was recommended by McSee, CarlRusso and JakeStockwell, who said: Evelyn Waugh snarls at the hypocrisy and ridiculousness of the American Dream and the Brits who try to maintain the pomp of their diminished homeland.

Once again, western leaders are giving a new Russian tsar the benefit of doubt.If those good things come with nasty addenda, such as an upsurge of authoritarian intolerance at home and a crescendo of snarls abroad, that—so the Putin-boosters argue is the price to be paid for reviving a humiliated and pauperised Russia.

"WHY didn't anyone lock her up?" snarls the protagonist of Caleb Crain's novel "Necessary Errors", on hearing that a friend, a talented poet, has committed suicide on her second attempt.

Municipal councils are "self-service cafeterias for political parties," snarls Magnus Staehler, who as mayor paid off Langenfeld's debt.

It's like watching two dogs circling each other, when the playful snaps suddenly turn to snarls.

(Come to that, Bostonians, after years of Big-Dig-induced snarls, are not mad keen on it either).

"It's like living in a pile of vomit," snarls one Mumbai entrepreneur.

"I am not going to sign this," snarls Mr Bibikov, tossing aside some papers involving a transport deal.

One is that the attacks on September 11th, and the fear of more in future on an even more devastating scale, have given the United States a powerful new motive for global activism, while persuading most other countries, whatever their snarls of criticism or resentment, not to stand in its way at least for the time being.

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