snobs in English

noun
1
a person with an exaggerated respect for high social position or wealth who seeks to associate with social superiors and dislikes people or activities regarded as lower-class.
He's a snob , a social climber and a misogynist, really a very unpleasant man.

Use "snobs" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "snobs" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "snobs", or refer to the context using the word "snobs" in the English Dictionary.

1. I hate snobs.

2. She dislikes snobs intensely.

3. They're snobs -- stuck - up and uppity and persnickety.

4. Manning and Smith, he added, were a malicious pair of snobs.

5. Snobs abound, mustn't live the wrong side of the tracks, which ethnic group are you?

6. 29 I have to say, I don't have much time for the pseudy vocabulary of wine snobs.

7. It has all of the requisite sand, surf, sun, snobs and sin to go along with its saucy swimwear.

8. % Arabica is known as a great place for excellent coffee, somewhere even coffee snobs would be go to

9. Bookshops serve a range of customers, stretching from first edition snobs, to students looking for bargains to vague-minded women looking for books as gifts to …

10. Most of the people who worshipped her, who read every tidbit about her in the gossip press and hung up pictures of her in their rooms, were not social snobs.

11. Donald Trump's freewheeling Mar-a-Lago Club is a saving grace, Affronting hypocrisy in a corseted culture of snobs -- or else it's the town's vulgar future made unpleasantly present

12. Alexis Petridis wrote "It would be nice to report that Dido's second album is strong enough to reveal her detractors as snobs, who hate the notion that her music appeals to 'ordinary' people ...

13. The words commonly used to describe egotistical individuals are extremely disparaging; we call them arrogant, haughty, big-headed, vain, conceited, stuck-up, or pretentious, and brand them Blowhards, show-offs, snobs, narcissists, pompous asses, or worse.

14. Lewis is the one who first called someone who thinks that moderns, with all our knowledge and progress, are superior to all who have come before us—“chronological snobs.” In saying so, he was implying that we fail to see the limitations and Blindnesses of our age

15. Lewis is the one who first called someone who thinks that moderns, with all our knowledge and progress, are superior to all who have come before us—“chronological snobs.” In saying so, he was implying that we fail to see the limitations and Blindnesses of our age