¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Snigglers
1. sniggler [n] - See also: sniggler
Lexicographical Neighbors of Snigglers
snig snigg snigged snigging sniggle sniggled sniggler snigglers (current term) sniggles sniggling | sniglet sniglets snigs snip snip off snipe snipe hunt snipe hunts snipebill snipebills | sniped snipefish |
Literary usage of Snigglers
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sport with Gun and Rod in American Woods and Waters by Alfred Marshall Mayer (1883)
"They constructed dug-outs, in which they paddled over the lakes, and angled from
them with their bone snigglers, and hooks made of the tusks of the wild ..."
2. Sport with Gun and Rod in American Woods and Waters by Alfred Marshall Mayer (1883)
"They constructed dug-outs, in which they paddled over the lakes, and angled from
them with their bone snigglers, and hooks made of the tusks of the wild ..."
3. Memories of the Months: Being Pages from the Notebook of a Field-naturalist by Herbert Maxwell (1897)
"In many districts the open fishings are rendered worthless to fair anglers by
the miserable snigglers who destroy gravid and unseasonable fish all through ..."
4. Angling Sketches by Andrew Lang, William Gordon Burn Murdoch (1891)
"In the open water, on the Ettrick, you may see half a dozen snigglers busy.
They all wear high wading trousers; they are all armed with stiff salmon-rods ..."
5. The Angler's Guide: Being a New, Plain, and Complete Practical Treatise on by Thomas Frederick Salter (1825)
"Some snigglers put the needle into the worm near the head, so that the tail is
presented to the Eel, which, from its moving or twisting about, they think is ..."
6. The Angler's Guide: Being a New, Plain, and Complete Practical Treatise on by Thomas Frederick Salter (1825)
"Some snigglers put the needle into the worm near the head, so that the tail is
presented to the Eel, which, from its moving or twisting about, they think is ..."
7. The Angler's Guide: Being a Plain and Complete Practical Treatise on the Art by Thomas Frederick Salter (1833)
"... as before described, which you can readily bend to the shape most convenient
for carrying the bait to any place you wish. Some snigglers put ..."