sneed
English edit
Pronunciation edit
Etymology 1 edit
From a 1999 Simpsons episode, "E-I-E-I-(Annoyed Grunt)" featuring a farming supply store, "Sneed's Feed & Seed", from the English surname Sneed; the joke is that the sign says the shop was "Formerly Chuck's", implying it formerly rhymed with Chuck instead ("Chuck's Fuck and Suck"). The sign became a meme on the online forum 4chan around 2012. It came to be used as a substitute for seethe (e.g. in the phrase "cope and seethe" → "cope and sneed"), then (as a noun) became synonymous with beta males when 4chan started automatically changing soyboy to sneed.(Can this(+) etymology be sourced?).
Verb edit
sneed (third-person singular simple present sneeds, present participle sneeding, simple past and past participle sneeded)
- (Internet slang) To seethe; to become extremely frustrated and agitated.
- 2022 May 3, “Pollack tells a woman to "Cope and seethe" and an abortion rights protest.”, in Reddit[1], r/ActualPublicFreakouts:
- If it was a real /pol/ poster, he'd tell her to cope and sneed.
- 2021 May 3, u/Zero5urvivers, “CIA's job ad for zoomers”, in Reddit[2], r/Drama:
- Its an ad made to get woke libs to cheer #girlbosses whacking democratically elected third world socialists and rightoids are sneeding. Amazing.
- 2021 May 15, u/Homofascism, “Close down the sub again. It's just idiotic burger rightoids sneeding about mayocide now”, in Reddit[3], r/Drama:
- (title)
Noun edit
sneed (plural sneeds)
- (Internet slang) One who seethes; a soyboy.
- 2021 October 28, “What is the deal with sneed, cope and dilate?”, in Reddit[4], r/NoStupidQuestions:
- He then told me to "Seethe, cope and dilate you sneed."
Etymology 2 edit
Verb edit
sneed
- simple past and past participle of snee
Anagrams edit
Dutch edit
Pronunciation edit
Audio (file)
Verb edit
sneed
Anagrams edit
West Frisian edit
Etymology edit
From Old Frisian *snēd, from Proto-Germanic *snaidō.
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
sneed c (plural sneden, diminutive sneedsje)
Further reading edit
- “sneed”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011