English edit

Etymology edit

snark +‎ -tastic

Pronunciation edit

Adjective edit

snarktastic (comparative more snarktastic, superlative most snarktastic)

  1. (informal) Very snarky, especially in an appealing or entertaining way.
    • 2006 April 21, Marijke Rowland, “Spicy, Dicey Kathy Griffin Dishes Hysterical Dirt”, in The Modesto Bee:
      By the time she made it to the mic the audience was ready to eat every snarktastic morsel from the palm of her hand.
    • 2008, Alexa Young, Frenemies, HarperTeen (2008), →ISBN, age 177:
      They loved her snarktastic attack on Halley—some people were even asking for Halley to write a response in her next column.
    • 2009 September 20, Joshua Alston, “Fall TV Preview: EHarmony Edition”, in Newsweek:
      One of the most promising new comedies of the fall, Community stars the snarktastic Joel McHale as a disgraced lawyer who returns to community college for a chance at a new life.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:snarktastic.