Snub in a sentence as a noun

By his own account: "Hitler didn't snub me – it was FDR who snubbed me.

It seems like most commenters take this as a snub to PHP, I don't see it that way at all.

There is no central node where you can just snub out anyone you choose because of some arbitrary mob consensus.

> What some politicians are proposing right now is an outright snub of the 2nd amendmentSo what?

Snub in a sentence as a verb

If they wanted her to come back to Apple it backfired, she'll never touch another iDevice after that snub.

In Jesse's autobiography he said that Hitler didn't snub him, but that Roosevelt did.

Instead of just doing it they like to talk about first, to make sure everyone knows just how much they are snubbing the US in the process.

Like Paul says he does This snippet appears repeatedly in Marco's article and strikes me as a passive-aggressive snub.

Snub in a sentence as an adjective

Academics snub their noses at 'businesses', that's for slimy 'business people', academics don't stoop to that level.

Traditional publishers who snub the e-book market are throwing money away.

Russia is far worse than the US when it comes to rights, but the US deserves the embarrassment it receives from this to include the obvious snub of the White House by Putin.

Hence the phenomenon of writers breathlessly reporting every snub or obstacle as if it were a personal affront to them, frequently mentioning themselves in the story, burying the lede beneath many paragraphs of overdramatic narrative, and baiting their writing with more and more clicheed hooks and attention-grabbing headlines.

Snub definitions

noun

an instance of driving away or warding off

See also: rebuff repulse

noun

a refusal to recognize someone you know; "the snub was clearly intentional"

verb

refuse to acknowledge; "She cut him dead at the meeting"

See also: ignore disregard

verb

reject outright and bluntly; "She snubbed his proposal"

See also: rebuff repel

adjective

unusually short; "a snub nose"