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"snappily" Definitions
  1. in a way that is clever or funny and short
  2. (informal) in a way that is attractive and fashionable
  3. in a way that is angry and impatient
  4. in a way that is lively or quick
"snappily" Synonyms
fast quickly rapidly swiftly speedily pronto quick posthaste hastily briskly apace soon presto fleetly swift hot post-haste lickety-split chop-chop double-quick sprucely nattily dashingly sharply smartly piercingly clearly distinctly pointedly discernibly strongly gaily active vigorously spirited stylishly in a spirited manner graphically perceptibly vividly lively sprightly spiritedly animatedly buoyantly bouncily vivaciously gayly livelily pertly animately trippingly sparkily perkily airily high-spiritedly energetically zippily actively abruptly curtly tersely rudely bluntly brusquely impolitely discourteously gruffly summarily dismissively perfunctorily shortly unceremonially unceremoniously tartly uncivilly ungraciously irritably testily irascibly crossly grumpily peevishly touchily grouchily rattily petulantly crabbily crankily cholerically cantankerously snappishly crotchetily tetchily pettishly fierily waspishly fashionably chicly trendily modishly hiply voguishly coolly elegantly classily inly snazzily spiffily dapperly swishly freshly wittily mischievously amusingly facetiously funnily impishly roguishly comically jocularly playfully puckishly flippantly glibly humorously jestingly merrily whimsically jocosely sportively banteringly bitingly cuttingly caustically sarcastically scathingly acerbically acrimoniously keenly penetratingly acidly incisively mordantly sardonically stingingly trenchantly stringently succinctly concisely briefly crisply catchily memorably neatly pithily cleverly aphoristically epigrammatically laconically elliptically coldly chillily freezingly icily glacially wintrily(US) frostily bitterly frigidly polarly nippily gelidly rawly frozenly chillingly appealingly captivatingly popularly attractively unforgettably addictively beguilingly fetchingly likeably(UK) likably(US) More
"snappily" Antonyms
slow slowly laggardly ploddingly tardily gradually sluggishly leisurely languidly unhurriedly at a snail's pace at a slow pace at a leisurely pace inanimately dully casually gently steadily deliberately calmly sloppily slovenly dishevelledly disheveledly unkemptly untidily daggily frumpily scruffily slobbily messily grubbily slatternly frowzily like a slob dowdily unchicly stylelessly unfashionably outmodedly listlessly lifelessly spiritlessly inactively feebly lethargically soullessly apathetically coldly abiotically impassively motionlessly inorganically inertly courteously politely patiently late later belatedly delinquently dilatorily behindhand unpunctually after hours behind time behind schedule after office hours at the last minute at the tail end past the usual closing time past the usual finishing time past the usual stopping time at your leisure at leisure good-naturedly peaceably happily nicely oldly old-fashionedly outdatedly pleasantly friendlily amiably kindly obligingly tolerantly kindlily benevolently agreeably generously magnanimously unselfishly long-windedly verbosely wordily prolixly ramblingly diffusely lengthily circuitously circumlocutorily windily tediously garrulously pleonastically prolongedly discursively meanderingly longly repetitiously periphrastically loquaciously ardently blazingly boilingly burningly fervently fervidly fierily glowingly hotly igneously scaldingly scorchingly searingly seethingly sizzlingly sultrily swelteringly torridly bakingly blisteringly

42 Sentences With "snappily"

How to use snappily in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "snappily" and check conjugation/comparative form for "snappily". Mastering all the usages of "snappily" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The photo-sharing app has grown snappily and now boasts 1bn monthly users.
In Estonia large retailers joined a snappily titled campaign, "The € will not increase the price".
"I think I'm worth the trouble," she said snappily, seemingly referring to her fundraising prowess.
That's where he'll be living, his power fictive but his presence ineluctable, snappily ever after.
The snappily-titled PDOs and PGIs promote and protect names of quality agricultural products and foodstuffs.
The snappily dressed American appeared to be building a thriving conglomerate that included sports teams and private universities.
That may be a commonplace of liberal academic theology, but putting it over snappily to a non-specialist audience needs practice.
Hell, they're dressed so damn snappily, they look like a crop of models hanging backstage at New York Fashion Week or something.
The source of this upheaval is a new set of regulations, snappily named the Second Payment Service Directive, or "PSD2" (see article).
Its mean teens are exceptionally so; every burn is so snappily delivered the show could almost promote itself as a parody about puerile bullying.
In it, Marlon Bundo, a snappily dressed bunny with a penchant for bright bow ties, falls in love with a bespectacled boy bunny named Wesley.
Despite, or rather because of, its awfulness the film contributed to the passage of the snappily named President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act of 1992.
So does Ms. Shapiro's direction, which is confident and highly polished; even the boys' mortifying, half-remembered rec-room dance routines are snappily choreographed, by Faye Driscoll.
For their part, several delegates in the hall cooed over Mr Trump's snappily dressed, perfectly coiffed children, as they declared their love for and pride in their father.
The abridged "Flute," using Julie Taymor's popular and fantastical 2004 production and translated snappily by J.D. McClatchy, returned to the house on Wednesday and runs through Jan. 5.
"Russian Doll" is lean and snappily paced; it even managed the rare feat, in the era of streaming-TV bloat, of making me wish for a bit more.
The money will help pay for the creation of Radar (Reporters And Data And Robots), snappily named software designed to generate upwards of 30,000 local news stories a month.
At times, this makes for episodic, choppy reading, and some of the peripheral plot points (a spider infestation, for instance) could have been cleared up a little more snappily.
And much of the fun of the show, snappily directed by Tamara Harvey, comes from seeing how Judy and Johnny are liberated and, ultimately, imprisoned by these period accouterments.
Nike's contract expired in the summer of 20083, and rather than renew it, Barcelona formed its own company — the snappily-titled Barcelona Licensing and Merchandising — to pick up the mantle.
Europe's competitor to America's drones, the snappily titled European Medium Altitude Long Endurance Remotely Piloted Aircraft System, is being put together by Airbus, in collaboration with Dassault Aviation of France and Leonardo of Italy.
As Taylor Downing's snappily told account lays bare, what arguably made the near-miss of November 9th 1983 worse was that the West had almost no idea the Soviet leadership believed war was imminent.
The Nancy Drew books, which have sold more than 80 million copies, offer a model of femininity that is self-reliant, snappily dressed, capable of catching the baddie in time to make the college dance.
The bill, snappily named ENCRYPT—that's Ensuring National Constitutional Rights of Your Private Telecommunications Act—is said to be a reaction to state-level encryption bills that have already been proposed in California and New York.
This week Li Keqiang, China's prime minister, swooped into Budapest for the annual meeting of the snappily titled Co-operation Between China and Central and Eastern European Countries (colloquially known as the 16+1 format), bringing promises worth €3bn.
That's according to a team of astronomers in the UK, U.S. and Australia, who revealed this week that snappily-named planet 2MASS J2126 is in an orbit around its star 7,000-times the size of Earth's orbit around the sun.
The film is snappily titled Cherry Bomb: The Documentary, and its 90 second trailer is kinda like a game of Prominent Rapper Bingo, featuring the likes of Pharrell, Kanye West (who compares Tyler to filmmaker Spike Jonze) and Lil Wayne.
It's a snappily paced, light-on-its-feet nightmare about pissing contests, bruised egos, and displays of dominance, and what happens when power and gendered behavior are so intertwined that they get openly treated as if they were one and the same.
A recent episode of the snappily named "The stage of optimism that Songun presented -- Volume 11," which airs on state-controlled Korea Central Television (KCTV), lampooned the US leader and "oppressed" South Koreans ahead of the North's nuclear warhead test this month.
But instead of snappily resetting his position with a punch, Arlovski slowly reels his spent right hand in like the cord on a vacuum cleaner—occasionally throwing a meaningless left hand from down by his waist as he loads up the right again.
The artwork borrows from the snappily titled 1843 painting "Solomon Eagle exhorting the People to Repentance during the Plague of 1665" by Paul Falconer Poole, and appears to hint at deeper religious martyrdom themes alongside tracks titled "Joan of Arc" and the titular "Solomon Eagle".
Perception Point reports that the newly discovered bug, which is snappily known as CVE-2016-0728, sits in the operating system's keyring, which is used to store things like security data, authentication keys and encryption keys so that they can't be used by any old app.
These include congressional hearings on the misrepresentation of their products, social rejection, World War II (a sequence that flirts with bad taste), the advent of vulgar hard-sell advertising (rendered in a "Mad Men"-style production number snappily choreographed by Christopher Gattelli) and the cruel march of changing times.
Reinstalling your OS or resetting your phone can make a big difference because it cuts out most of the contributing factors we've mentioned above, but unless you're restoring the original OS that came with the device, it still won't run as snappily, even before you've started adding your apps back in.
Nikon has only one announcement for CES 2018, but it's a heck of a thing: behold the snappily named AF-S Nikkor 180-400mm f/4E TC123 FL ED VR. It's a super-telephoto lens with a built-in 1.4x teleconverter, meaning that you can extend the focal length to 252-560mm, though you'll lose a stop of light and aperture in the process.
It was from this time that he started to use the pseudonym "Karl Anders" in place of his birth name which had been Kurt Wilhelm Naumann. In London he joined the socialist New Beginning anti-Nazi opposition group and started working as a broadcaster with the Broadcaster of the European Revolution radio station which transmitted from London between 1940 and 1942, before being effectively subsumed into the more snappily named British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). Between 1943 and 1945 Anders worked as chief editor for German language workers' broadcasts by the BBC.
Wright lived on the farm with his mother, father and four siblings until he was 18, attending both Henllan County Primary School and Denbigh High School. In his early teens he formed a short lived band called TUCAN with a fellow student. After completing his A-level examinations, he moved away to attend the Polytechnic of North London, where he studied Electronics and Communications Engineering for two years. Whilst at college, he also formed another two-man band in the shape of the snappily named Infinite Remix III Jnr.
Rather, these are snappily repetitive beats on which the stars can put across their message as a form of hip hop conversation." For Variety, Jim Aswad described it as "solid and generally satisfying, but not the best from either." Will Hodgkinson of The Times reviewed track-by-track, stated: "Jay-Z is as dynamic as ever and the new, though Beyoncé demands attention on this surprise album, [...] despite the ups and downs detailed on Beyoncé's Lemonade and Jay-Z's subsequent mea culpa 4:44. Instead they are coming out fighting, with all that fame and money making them defensive, even paranoid, while a mix of classic soul, hard- hitting hip-hop and slinky R&B.
Ben East, writing in The Observer, describes the book as a "snappily written journey" and praises the "captivating" material on Beethoven. Liz Thomson, writing in The Independent, gives a more critical review, characterising the book as "too facile for the audience most likely to engage with it but which will leave the casual listener... floundering". The book's unearthing of numerous unusual facts is foregrounded in several reviews: Lezard mentions "surprising and fascinating factoids" and Hart calls them "entertaining ClassicFM-style snippets". Several reviewers comment on the "thought-provoking and sobering" notion on the book's opening page that, until the invention of recording in the latter part of the 19th century, a music lover would only ever hear their favourite works a handful of times.
With Cold War tensions providing political context during the 1950s and early 1960s, the East German and West German governments both denied the existence of government contacts between the German states. In reality, the sale of the prisoner releases was negotiated, from the East German side, by a lawyer originally from Silesia called Wolfgang Vogel who evidently enjoyed the full confidence of the party leadership, but was also valued by the leadership in West Germany, described snappily on at least one occasion by Helmut Schmidt as "our mail man". Vogel's West German negotiating partners were government lawyers such as Walter Priesnitz and Ludwig A. Rehlinger, along with senior politicians, including Herbert Wehner, Helmut Schmidt and Hans-Jochen Vogel. Another politician who became closely involved in front-line government-level negotiations, as the veil of secrecy began to wear thin, was Hermann Kreutzer, a formerly East German political activist who in 1949 had been imprisoned for openly opposing the contentious political merger that had led to the creation of East Germany's ruling SED (party).
Despite this, Valerie loses her job anyway, being seen more as a liability than as an asset, implying in a conversation with Bart that her fall of grace greatly depended by her having a relationship with an active, accident-prone metahuman. Her loss of employment, the strain of having a relationship with a metahuman of convoluted origins whose biological and chronological ages don't match and her growing feelings of isolation and inadequacy lead Valerie to carelessly vent her troubles and feelings, including the concern about Bart's secret identity, to her best friends: a thing Bart discovered during a double date, when Valerie's best friend, Brenda, rebuffed him with a barrage of sexual innuendos about his speed-related abilities. While Valerie attempted to patch things up, opening up to Bart about her feelings and concerns, Bart snappily told her about Sue Dibny's final fate, comparing her brutal rape at the hands of Doctor Light and her grievous death with the destiny awaiting Valerie because of her carelessness. Deeply hurt by his lack of tact and understanding, Valerie unilaterally broke off their relationship.
In that facility's initial years, each alphanumeric character of lead type was set by hand. In 1885, MacDonald began automating this laborious process by purchasing an early model of the Thorne typesetting machine, which required three men to operate it (one to work its keyboard, one to justify type into lines, and one to feed molten lead into the machine). In 1902, he replaced this with the first Mergenthaler Linotype automatic typesetter in northeastern Connecticut, a machine which required a single operator but output quadruple the amount of type. During its early years, the Chronicle was politically neutral, but in time MacDonald became a strong Democratic advocate.140th Anniversary Edition, the Chronicle, January 4, 2017. pp. 20-22. Reminiscing during 1952, John A. Keefe, who joined the Chronicle as a printer at age 16, described MacDonald in 1899: “Mr. ‘Mac’ was slight in stature, a snappily dressed man, who even in poor health at that time, came to the office daily in his hansom carriage driven by Mr. Tew, his coachman. By then he had given up the editor's job, but he never gave up supervising the newsroom.

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