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Discover LudwigThe word 'snot' is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used as a slang term to refer to nasal mucus. Example: I wiped the snot off my face after I sneezed.
Exact(59)
I, on the other had, gurn horribly, my mouth widening like an Aardman character, my eyes disappearing into my blotchy cheeks, snot dripping from my scrunched-up nose.
At the end of it all, celebrities still have belly button fluff, snot and – sadly – reproductive organs.
By the time I've located a shirt not covered in toddler snot under a volcanic eruption of polyester, I've forgotten what it was I was looking for.
When he starts to weep, snot and tears dripping from his face, they slap him harder.
Were you all howls and snot and dribble?
There's no fresh air, no green fields and everyone sneezes black, polluted snot.
Strings of gum dangle from sills like snot from a nostril.
Think The Apprentice: You're Hired but with the audience in gleeful raptures over clips where Mary Berry makes inadvertent double-entendres about nuts, or the Mr Sniffles egg separator – a porcelain face, where the albumen pours through the nostrils like snot.
So now Stephen's always saying, "The first thing I saw, as you walked down that aisle, was that you had snot on your face!" Professor Green's new album, 'Growing Up in Public', will be out later in the year.
Stock up on supplies and batten down the hatches for a fun-filled romp through full-body viral rash and a head full of snot.
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But if you really have to travel, Australia and Romania are looking relatively snot-free.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com