¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sneakiest
1. sneaky [adj] - See also: sneaky
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sneakiest
Literary usage of Sneakiest
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Cooking With the Baker Street Bunchby M. W. Paulson by M. W. Paulson (2006)
""Which is why I have come up with my sneakiest plan ever," Breanna said. ...
"I guess we will have to use my second sneakiest plan. ..."
2. Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage by Inc. Merriam-Webster (1994)
"1986 The second construction is the sneakiest one. It is the one in which like
introduces a clause from which the verb—and sometimes even more—has been ..."
3. Fraser's Magazine by Thomas Carlyle (1862)
"Yet doubtless there are persons to whom the sneakiest manner is agreeable : who
enjoy the flattery and the humiliation of the wretched toady who is always ..."
4. Phemie Frost's Experiences by Ann Sophia Stephens (1874)
"What she said to him there I cannot tell, but by and by they came back to the
hotel, the sneakiest-looking creatures you ever set your two eyes on. ..."
5. The Yankee in the British Zone by Ewen Cameron MacVeagh, Lee D. Brown (1920)
"One of the sneakiest, and from a military point of view, one of the least efficient
customs of war that the Germans introduced was the setting of what Tommy ..."
6. With Walt Whitman in Camden by Horace Traubel (1908)
"It was the most cowardly and sneakiest thing to get hold of the letter—-use it—in
that way. Look at that headline in The Press: 'The British Minister tells ..."
7. Famous Scouts, Including Trappers, Pioneers, and Soldiers of the Frontier by Charles Haven Ladd Johnston (1910)
""I've got a dog here," he cried, "which is the meanest, sneakiest, trickiest cur
in all Kentucky. I call him Simon Girty, because he looks like you. ..."