出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/04/22 19:54 UTC 版)
From earlier snag (“stump or branch of a tree”), from 中期英語 *snagge, *snage, from Old Norse snagi (“clothes peg”) (compare Old Norse snag-hyrndr (“snag-horned, having jagged corners”)), perhaps ultimately from a derivative of Proto-Germanic *snakk-, *snēgg, variations of *snakaną (“to crawl, creep, wind about”).
Compare Norwegian snag, snage (“protrusion; projecting point”), Icelandic snagi (“peg”). Also see Dutch snoek (“pike”).
snag (plural snags)
snag (third-person singular simple present snags, present participle snagging, simple past and past participle snagged)
{{rfdef}}.The Australian National Dictionary Centre suggests that snag as slang for "sausage" most likely derives from the earlier British slang for "light meal", although it makes no comment on how it came to be specifically applied to sausages.Meanings and origins of Australian words and idioms The word's use in football slang originates as a shortening of "sausage roll", rhyming slang for "goal", to sausage, and hence, by synonymy, snag.
snag (plural snags)
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
snag (plural snags)
snag (plural snags)
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to distort the meaning of something
to disturb something
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