snatch

Etymology

From Middle English snacchen, snecchen, from Old English *snæċċan, *sneċċan, from Proto-West Germanic *snakkijan, from Proto-Germanic *snakkijaną, *snakkōną (“to nibble, snort, chatter”); see *snūtaz (“snout”). Cognate with Dutch snakken (“to sob, pant, long for”), Low German snacken (“to chatter”), German schnacken (“to chat”), Norwegian snakke (“to chat”). Related to snack.

verb

  1. (transitive) To grasp and remove quickly.
    He snatched up the phone.
    She snatched the letter out of the secretary's hand.
  2. (intransitive) To attempt to seize something suddenly.
    to snatch at a rope
  3. (transitive) To take or seize hastily, abruptly, or without permission or ceremony.
    to snatch a kiss
    1731-1735, Alexander Pope, Moral Essays when half our knowledge we must snatch, not take
  4. (transitive, informal) To steal.
    Someone has just snatched my purse!
  5. (transitive, informal, figurative, by extension) To take (a victory) at the last moment.
    But, with United fans in celebratory mood as it appeared their team might snatch glory, they faced an anxious wait as City equalised in stoppage time. May 13, 2012, Alistair Magowan, “Sunderland 0-1 Man Utd”, in BBC Sport
  6. (transitive, informal) To do something quickly in the limited time available.
    He snatched a sandwich before catching the train.
    He snatched a glimpse of her while her mother had her back turned.
    No department of the Southern Railway escaped some share of the work involved, and the outdoor traffic and locomotive staffs in particular were engaged literally night and day, snatching a few hours' sleep as opportunity offered, until the task was completed. 1940 July, “Notes and News: A Magnificent Transport Achievement”, in Railway Magazine, page 419
    You might now reason that even a 12-minute walk to the store to buy a can of beans is too great an expenditure of time, and that the fee paid for one-hour delivery is a fair price to snatch those minutes back into your life. November 21 2019, Samanth Subramanian, “How our home delivery habit reshaped the world”, in The Guardian
    In 1914, the Hendon and Finchley Times published a piece titled 'People who have no Christmas'. An engine-driver's comment was this: "For many years now I have never enjoyed a real Christmas. My engine has claimed me on this day, and my only regret is that I am not attached to a slow goods train, so that I could snatch time to eat some plum-pudding." December 14 2022, David Turner, “The Edwardian Christmas getaway...”, in RAIL, number 972, page 35

noun

  1. A quick grab or catch.
    The leftfielder makes a nice snatch to end the inning.
    And he […] glared on the cold pistols that hung before him—ready for anything. And he took down one with a snatch and weighed it in his hand, and fell to thinking again; […] 1863, Sheridan Le Fanu, The House by the Churchyard
  2. A short period.
    Frank looked at the screens dully. He had slept about three hours, in snatches. 2020, Kim Stanley Robinson, chapter 1, in The Ministry for the Future, Little, Brown Book Group
  3. (weightlifting) A competitive weightlifting event in which a barbell is lifted from the platform to locked arms overhead in a smooth continuous movement.
  4. A piece of some sound, usually music or conversation.
    I heard a snatch of Mozart as I passed the open window.
    But, purgatory as the place would appear, the stranger advances into it; and, like Orpheus in his gay descent to Tartarus, lightly hums to himself an opera snatch. 1857, Herman Melville, chapter XV, in The Confidence-Man: His Masquerade
  5. (vulgar slang) The vulva.
    Claude, is it true what they say about Olovia? Of course she’s getting a little old for us—what about Marilyum, did you try her snatch? 1962, Douglas Woolf, Wall to Wall, Grove Press, page 83
    Roughly Santino ripped the sheet from the bed, exposing all of her. She had blond hair on her snatch, which drove him crazy. He was partial to blondes. 1985, Jackie Collins, Lucky, Simon and Schuster, page 150
    Dan: Hey, Ani, I found my keys! They were in my pocket. Ani: That's great, Dan! Of course, I've never lost mine. Dan: Really? Where do you keep yours? Ani: In my snatch! Jul 11 2004, Bayard Russell, nonemorecomic
    […]You want me to ask Brandy to let you paint her naked body with all this gooey stuff to make a mold of her snatch? 2008, Jim Craig, North to Disaster, Bushak Press, page 178
  6. (aviation) Rapid, uncommanded jerking or oscillation of the ailerons of some aircraft at high Mach numbers, resulting from shock wave formation at transonic speeds.
    If, after the pilot notices the overspeed, he deploys the spoilers, or if aileron "snatch" rolls the airplane to an excessive bank angle, it may become impossible to recover. 1982, National Transportation Safety Board, quoting Federal Aviation Administration, Learjet Special Certification Review interim report, 1981, quoted in Aircraft Accident Report: Sky Train Air, Inc., Gates Learjet 24, N44CJ, Felt, Oklahoma, October 1, 1981, archived from the original 21 February 2021, retrieved 2021-02-20, page 17
  7. (dated) A brief period of exertion.
  8. (dated) A catching of the voice.
  9. (dated) A hasty snack; a bite to eat.
  10. (dated) A quibble.

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