Examples of using Snobby in English and their translations into German
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Colloquial
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Official
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Ecclesiastic
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Medicine
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Financial
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Ecclesiastic
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Political
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Computer
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Programming
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Official/political
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Political
She seems snobby.
A bit snobby and cool.
You're all right too, snobby.
Snobby mom, distant dad?
Tom is quite snobby.
Snobby little jerk, isn't he?
Not at the snobby court.
Even I find it a little snobby.
Less snobby than traditional British unis.
Mary is quite snobby.
That snobby, cold woman thought she was better than me?
But not like snobby vegan.
Wait, I got to ask. Why did you think I was snobby?
Well, that is your snobby opinion.
I could see why some of the boys took him for snobby.
You don't want to be a snobby elitist, but think about your friends and acquaintances.
See, you're being snobby again.
She became snobby and judgmental and used guys as pawns of warfare, which is saying a lot, considering it was fourth grade.
I remember thinking that you were a little snobby.
Portia is a bratty, and snobby Honeybee scout, whose mother is the troop leader.
Although they may be going for'hard to get' and'high value', if taken too far this approach can come off that you are uninterested, unavailable,unfriendly and even snobby.
I mean, I don't mean to be unfriendly or snobby or anything, I just don't have a lot to say.
Something at the snobby Theater-West-End of the British capital is, that Kroeger is the first German-Speaking male actor here"to be allowed" to perform- up until now only three ladies of German tongue managed that.
Thanks to this, today, this elixir is desired by the most snobby and select profiles of the city.
And iwth its ambituous but never snobby cuisine, it undoubtedly sets standards for taste and presentation in the Sofia restaurant scene.
Its motto applies to the sport of golf throughout the region: not snobby, not fashionable but incredibly endearing.
The crowd can be a little snobby, but guys if you're looking to find yourself a spanish senorita, the Mojito is the place for you.
On a rainy night in 1912, the extraordinary and snobby linguist Henry Higgins meets Eliza Doolittle, a ragged and ordinary selling violets.
So when hotels forgo the whole snobby"you have to purchase a treatment in order to enjoy the spa facilities" and instead open them up to all guests, well, we really appreciate that.