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 snarling 添加此单词到默认生词本
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    Snarling \Snarl"ing\,
    a. & n. from {Snarl}, v.

    {Snarling iron}, a tool with a long beak, used in the process
    of snarling. When one end is held in a vise, and the shank
    is struck with a hammer, the repercussion of the other
    end, or beak, within the article worked upon gives the
    requisite blow for producing raised work. See 1st {Snarl}.


    Snarl \Snarl\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Snarled}; p. pr. & vvb. n.
    {Snarling}.] [Etymol. uncertain.]
    To form raised work upon the outer surface of (thin metal
    ware) by the repercussion of a snarling iron upon the inner
    surface.

    1. The funeral procession in Seoul, which police did not try to stop, moved through the center of the capital, snarling traffic in the morning rush hour.
    2. Daily protests rock Paris's Left Bank, snarling traffic and tempers.
    3. A single-engine plane made an emergency landing between two freeways in the Cincinnati area injuring the pilot and his passenger and snarling traffic for hours.
    4. As one reviewer noted, it was music that "never stops snarling.
    5. No waiting for a table. Turn and bark down a snarling Doberman?
    6. Strayhorn interrupts, snarling at the lawyer: "Don't make him lie.
    7. A winter storm struck the Northeast, dumping as much as eight inches of snow, snarling traffic and delaying air travel in New York and Boston.
    8. All of our dreams, they are nightmares." The snarling guard dogs that patrolled the Berlin Wall held back East Germans yearning to breathe free in the West, but they also kept an unwelcome visitor at bay - the rabid fox.
    9. But Stapleton Airport's customers clearly are impressed with a ticket agent who smiles and beckons, rather than snarling and sighing.
    10. A heavy snowstorm struck the South, snarling travel and closing schools as a record cold wave continued in the Midwest and East.
    11. A weather front meteorologists were calling the 'Siberian Express' gripped the upper Midwest for the sixth consecutive day yesterday, with extreme cold closing businesses and schools and snarling airline traffic, reports Laurie Morse from Chicago.
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