A tool for unclogging plumbing.
[Friedrich] Kadgien—described by US interrogators as “not a true Nazi” but “a snake of the lowest sort”—subsequently left Switzerland for Brazil then Argentina, the paper said, where he started a company and a family and died in 1978, ag…
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Add your own interpretation of "snake".
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Hahaha vracam se da probam Negative Self Talk, Matcha Bitch i Snake Oil 😂
(figurative) A person who acts deceitfully for personal or social gain; a treacherous person.
Well, if it was Moore, he's a fucking snake.
“Snirl (snake girl) as opposed to snirl (snail girl)”
“Now playing on 91.3 Ayclt FM HD3: Let Me Love You by DJ Snake, Justin Bieber! Tune in now: https://radio.913aycltfm.com/listen/91.3_ayclt_fm_hd3/bluesky”
“Hahaha vracam se da probam Negative Self Talk, Matcha Bitch i Snake Oil 😂”
“There's a reason Jimbo Snake Chalmers gave Bullock that job. Oh the games they play with us. The RBA isn't here to help us lol. They're here to help the government of the day and capitalism (the rich)”
“apparently people have datamined unused models where gideon had an actual snakelike final boss model which was WAY cooler and fit the snake motifs his design already had”
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Any of the suborder of legless reptiles with long, thin bodies and fork-shaped tongues.
The man writhed like a trampled snake, and a red foam bubbled from his lips.
"snake" means any of the suborder of legless reptiles with long, thin bodies and fork-shaped tongues. It is one of many casual words teens pick up from friends, social media, music or sport, and on its own it carries no particular warning. If you hear your teen use it, it is fair to ask what they mean by it in their friend group, since meanings drift quickly. Asking out of curiosity rather than alarm tends to keep the conversation open and useful.
"snake" is informal English meaning any of the suborder of legless reptiles with long, thin bodies and fork-shaped tongues. It is used widely across English varieties. A more formal or neutral equivalent would be something like "any of the suborder of legless reptiles with long" expressed in standard vocabulary. A common mistake is to assume "snake" can replace its standard equivalent in every register; keep it for spoken or casual situations and use the formal form in writing. If you are a B2 or C1 learner, it is useful to recognise this word when you hear or read it, but think carefully about whether the situation really calls for it before using it yourself.
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