snifter
English
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Cognac in a snifter
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsnɪftə(ɹ)/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
Noun
snifter (plural snifters)
- A small pear-shaped glass used for aromatic liquors such as bourbon and brandy.
- 2003 January 20, “Getting Saucy”, in Time:
- [H]e springs to another wooden vat and turns a valve, filling a snifter with a warm amber liquid. […] Bang holds the liquid up to the light, swirls it around, takes a sniff of the pungent bouquet, puts the glass to his lips—and gives a satisfied smile.
- Synonym of nip, a small amount of alcohol, (particularly) equivalent to what a snifter might hold.
- 1917, Edgar Rice Burroughs, chapter 1, in The Oakdale Affair:
- "I guess you're a regular all right. Here, have a snifter?" and he pulled a flask from his side pocket, holding it toward The Oskaloosa Kid.
- (chiefly in the plural, with definite article) Synonym of sniffles, various minor ailments involving a runny nose.
- 1844, Henry Stephens, The Book of the Farm, volume 2, page 260:
- The only disease I can remember to have seen in winter is what is vulgarly called the snifters, that is, a discharge of matter from the nose, which causes a noise in the nose like stifled breathing.
- (US) A severe storm.
- (The addition of quotations indicative of this usage is being sought:)
Synonyms
- (glass): brandy snifter, brandy glass, brandy bowl, cognac glass, whiskey glass
Derived terms
- brandy snifter
Translations
Verb
snifter (third-person singular simple present snifters, present participle sniftering, simple past and past participle sniftered)
- To sniff.
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