例句 |
snatchverb to take physical control or possession of (something) suddenly or forciblythe brazen seagull snatched the french fry right from my hand bag, capture, catch, collar, cop(slang), corral, get, glom, grab, grapple, hook, land, nab, nail, net, nobble(British slang), rap, seize, snag, snap (up), snare, trap glove, halter, lasso, ropeapprehend, arrest, detainbay, cornerclasp, clutch, fasten (on), fist, grasp, grip, hold, latch (on or onto), securerend, wrestenmesh(also immesh), ensnare, entangle, entrap, meshabduct, kidnap, spirit (away or off) take hold (of) miss discharge, free, liberate, releasedrop, loosen, unhand snatchnounslangthe unlawful or forcible carrying away of a person or animalto the police chief, it didn't look like a snatch, but another case of a bride-to-be getting cold feet v.take, seize, grasp, clutch, snatch, grab mean to get hold of by or as if by catching up with the hand.take is a general term applicable to any manner of getting something into one's possession or control.take some salad from the bowl seize implies a sudden and forcible movement in getting hold of something tangible or an apprehending of something fleeting or elusive when intangible.seized the suspect grasp stresses a laying hold so as to have firmly in possession.grasp the handle and pull clutch suggests avidity or anxiety in seizing or grasping and may imply less success in holding.clutching her purse snatch suggests more suddenness or quickness but less force than seize.snatched a doughnut and ran grab implies more roughness or rudeness than snatch.grabbed roughly by the arm in the 13th century |