Part 789 (2/2)
1. To prune, S.
2. To put in order, S.
_Ferguson._
_To_ SNOIF, _v. a._ To whirl, applied to the spindle.
V. ~Snoove~.
_Douglas._
Su. G. _sno_, contorquere.
SNOIT, _s._ Mucus from the nose.
A. S. _snote_, id.
_Watson._
_To_ SNOKE, SNOOK, SNOWK, _v. n._
1. To smell at objects like a dog, S. Douglas.
2. To range, prying into every corner, S.
Su. G. _snok-a_, insidiose scrutari.
SNOOD, _s._ A short hair-line, to which a fis.h.i.+ng-hook is tied, S.
_Statist. Acc._
Su. G. _snod_, funiculus; _sno_, to twist.
SNOOD, SNOID, SNUDE, _s._ A fillet with which the hair of a young woman's head is bound up, S.
_Pennant._
A. S. _snod_, vitta.
_To_ ~Snood~, _v. a._ To bind up the hair with a fillet, S.
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