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Snarky

Posted: Mon Nov 28, 2005 1:36 pm
by sugarmelter
defined as irritable or short-tempered; irascible.

apparently this word is Germanic, as shown below. i'd love to know how this word worked its way into English.

From dialectal snark, to nag, from snark, snork, to snore, snort, from Dutch and Low German snorken, of imitative origin.

- c

Posted: Mon Nov 28, 2005 3:18 pm
by Grogie
Thanks Sugarmelter. I was familiar with the word but I didn,t know it,s definition.

Re: Snarky

Posted: Sun Dec 04, 2005 3:05 pm
by M. Henri Day
...

i'd love to know how this word worked its way into English

...
Generally speaking, the best (free) on-line source is Douglas Harper's Online Etymology Dictionary (subscribers can naturally refer to the Oxford English Dictionary), but here he doesn't provide much more than what you have written above :
snarky (adj.)
"irritable, short-tempered," 1906, from snark (v.) "to snort" (1866), from an imitative source akin to Low Ger. snarken, N.Fris. snarke, Swed. snarka.
Henri

Posted: Mon Dec 05, 2005 12:02 am
by tcward
Reminds me of this word:
snorkel
1944, "airshaft for submarines," from Ger. Schnorchel, from Ger. navy slang Schnorchel "nose, snout," related to schnarchen "to snore" (see snore). So called from its resemblance to a nose and its noise when in use. The Anglicized spelling first recorded 1949. The meaning "curved tube used by a swimmer to breathe under water" is first recorded in 1953.
-Tim

Posted: Wed Dec 07, 2005 1:03 pm
by M. Henri Day
Reminds me of this word:
... The meaning "curved tube used by a swimmer to breathe under water" is first recorded in 1953.
But not too far under water. Remember, pressure increases very quickly - i e, beyond the capacity of human lungs and diaphragm to compensate for - with increasing depth in water. What the snorkel does is allow a swimmer at the surface to breathe with his or her face continually in the water, which obviously facilitates obervation of what is going on down there. If one wants to go to below the surface, one either has to hold one's breath or use scuba equipment....

Henri, who used to do a fair amount of diving on Bronze Age wrecks and stuff like that...