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"sniffed at" Antonyms

55 Sentences With "sniffed at"

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

That, nevertheless, is a market not to be sniffed at.
He sniffed at the local Blockbuster, which mainly stocked mainstream fare.
Incremental work that solves practical problems is not to be sniffed at.
Overall, though, it is a success story not to be sniffed at.
A foal galloped past us and sniffed at a woman walking by.
Afterward, they sniffed at the air suspiciously until they surrounded Mr. Dorsey.
In his direction, Mussorgsky sniffed at unnamed "soulless traitors" to the nationalist cause.
It also helped poor Chinese workers get richer, which isn't to be sniffed at either.
Tate Modern's original permanent exhibition was sniffed at for its patchy content and occasional holes.
Exploring new ways to warn internet users about privacy isn't an idea to be sniffed at.
"No more being sniffed at for being a foreigner with a background nobody understands," he fumes.
Its chicken breakfast sandwiches are obsession-worthy, and its biscuits are not to be sniffed at.
This exporting achievement is not to be sniffed at when one considers the barriers to the cheese trade.
He had sniffed at a suggestion that he might be limited that night if the Giants needed him.
This is not to be sniffed at, and a reprieve for hundreds and thousands of Syrians is desperately needed.
So, what is interesting about that is the market sort of sniffed at $65 billion cash, whoop-de-doo.
Survivors recall that Mengele sniffed at the flower in his lapel as he decided the fate of new arrivals.
The way the dog sniffed at her bed made it all too obvious that the Camerons had their girl back.
Phone-based follow-ups to "Super Mario Run" may yet take off; Mario's charm is not to be sniffed at.
That would have delivered a solid 15 percent return, not to be sniffed at in a building global bear market.
There were people who had been doing home organizing for years by then, and they sniffed at her severe methods.
But, he has 11 KO victories to his credit and his technical boxing skills are nothing to be sniffed at.
The regular army establishment, of course, sniffed at the idea of a self-proclaimed military elite, and not without cause.
The Kleingärten used to be sniffed at by the urban elite — too square, too uncool, too full of garden gnomes.
For all the pressures imposed by China's emergence, lifting millions of people out of poverty is not to be sniffed at.
In the early days of Perella Weinberg, when some Wall Street rivals sniffed at the new banking upstart, Mr. Kengeter was welcoming.
Kong tilted his head up and, with Miller tweaking the nose, sniffed at Ann's feet and then let out a satisfied grumble.
That's nothing to be sniffed at, but it's a small sum compared to the $69 billion revenue generated annually by Samsung's chip business.
Mr Mueller sniffed at "the insufficiency of those responses," noting that Mr Trump claimed some form of memory failure more than 30 times.
"I can't believe you slept with my wife," the actor sniffed at Blunt as they prepared to present the award for Adapted Screenplay.
These eaux-de-vie, like the one I sniffed at Delamain, have an alcoholic strength of around 45813 percent when they're first stored.
But its achievement shouldn't be sniffed at, simply because it couldn't continue to make TV at the level of its first eight seasons for 30-some years.
Given the cooling off of the price of bitcoin, Ethereum and other cryptocurrencies this year, a three-fold return with no risk is not to be sniffed at.
That is not to be sniffed at, but being clever about tax has become an excuse for firms to obfuscate and dither about their plans for their balance sheets.
After circling the car and prodding its haunches like it was a prize steer, Tab, my wife's uncle, sniffed at Cadillac's choice of using plastic plating rather than steel.
The option to control the power and volume of your TV without switching remotes, as well as the ability to access voice control, is nothing to be sniffed at.
When she was challenged on the fact that a majority of the public supports Trump's proposal on raising age requirements, Sanders sniffed at opinion surveys and metaphorically threw up her hands.
Those newly desirable autos include specimens most serious collectors wouldn't have sniffed at a few years ago — '90s models like Mr. Glaubitz's Defender and sporty Japanese machines such as Toyota's Supra and Honda's NSX.
Strangely — because this is a dog whose appetite extends to ear plugs, coffee beans and small rocks — he sniffed at one of the cute bone-shaped crackers, then wandered off to consume some more pebbles.
An autumnal sun bathed all in a blond light, goldenrod and desert grasses, and Churro sheep and their guardian dogs, which cocked heads and sniffed at the air, trying to catch a scent of coyotes.
Writing, as the name suggests, in the Lancet medical journal, a pair of dermatologists reported the case of a patient whose dog constantly sniffed at a mole on her leg, on one occasion even trying to bite it off.
In sum, although Trump is still putting together his foreign policy, he already has the pieces to create a more coherent and possibly more successful policy toward North Korea than the stodgy U.S. elite, who have sniffed at him.
" Open to the public since Wednesday, Guardian art critic Adrian Searle has already sniffed at the show's pretence, exclaiming that "an all-female lineup is intrinsically no more interesting than an all-male roster of swinging dicks, especially when it has no larger thematic purpose.
He had little use for contemporary music (needlessly complex or dull, he said), disdained serial technique and sniffed at the 1970s revival of Gustav Mahler's sprawling, emotionally overflowing symphonies, although he did profess at one point to have gone through his own Mahler period.
I could sense how my mother, who sniffed at reality TV as a rule, found herself annoyed by Ms. Manigault yet also had a begrudging soft spot for her — something I can't decouple from her own effort to overcome workplace bias against women of color.
Read more: These photos of 90-year-old Japanese men competing in full-contact rugby are all the fitness motivation you needFrance, Argentina, and Scotland are underdogs as always, however are not to be sniffed at, while Olympic gold medalists Fiji are the tournament's dark horse.
If critics sniffed at the store as unhip — "Much of the men's wear is the stuff of a bygone Fitzgeraldian era," Cintra Wilson wrote in The New York Times in 2009 — its defense was that good taste and the highest standards have always been and always will be cool.
So while Woz might talk disparaging about the 'jewelry market' — given his geek pedigree it is entirely his right to be dismissive of such fripperies — the chunky price-tags on those fancy Apple bracelets should not be sniffed at as a strategy for Cupertino to eke more mileage out of its hardware business model.
It's a shame that Steve Carell was nominated for his very, extremely Michael Scott-y turn in Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris's Battle of the Sexes—partially because his performance in the film represents the diminishing returns of a side of Carell we've seen one too many times, and partially because he had a much better showing in Richard Linklater's critically sniffed-at mid-aughts period piece.
He scrutinized the end of it, balanced it in one hand and even sniffed at the unoffensive shillalah.
In 2006, due to new techniques in both soring and detection, the USDA began a larger crackdown on soring within the industry. A new device known as a "sniffer" (also used to detect the chemical presence of bombs in airport security) can now be employed, where swabbed samples are taken from the horse and then "sniffed". At the 2006 Tennessee Walking Horse Celebration, the longstanding dispute between trainers and USDA inspectors came to a head. The inspectors disqualified six of ten horses from showing on the night of Friday, August 25, 2006.
Smith and several others were placed behind large plywood sheets scattered around one end of the stadium and a police canine named Crow at the other end sniffed at a priest vestment that Smith had used to wipe himself when defecating after a double-homicide. Crow ran straight across Bleecker Stadium to Smith. In 1981, the stadium was the site of a rugby match between a regional team of Americans against the South African national rugby team, called the Springboks. Governor Hugh Carey tried to block the game from being played as protest against the South African policy of apartheid, and he even brought the issue all the way to the US Supreme Court.
In 1983, Bryanston Distributing Company, the company that originally distributed the original The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, lost the rights to that film, and the rights reverted back to the original owners, New Line bought the rights and re- released the film to theatres in that same year became very successful for the studio. New Line expanded its film production in the early 1980s, producing or co-producing films including Alone in the Dark and Polyester, directed by John Waters. Polyester was one of the first films to introduce a novelty cinema experience named Odorama, where members of the audience were provided with a set of "scratch and sniff" cards to be scratched and sniffed at specific times during the film, which provided an additional sensory connection to the viewed image. In 1983, Lynne joined the board.
7 The Woolcot children, while holidaying at the cattle station, listen to Mr Gillet telling an Aboriginal story he "got at second-hand" from Tettawonga, the station's Aboriginal stockman. "'Once upon a time' (Judy sniffed at the old- fashioned beginning), 'once upon a time,' said Mr. Gillet, 'when this young land was still younger, and incomparably more beautiful, when Tettawonga's ancestors were brave and strong and happy as careless children, when their worst nightmare had never shown them so evil a time as the white man would bring their race, when--' 'Oh, get on! muttered Pip impatiently. 'Well,' said Mr Gillet, 'when, in short, an early Golden Age wrapped the land in its sunshine, a young kukuburra and its mate spread their wings and set off towards the purple mountains beyond the gum trees..."Turner, Ethel, Seven Little Australians, Ward Lock, London, 1984, pp203.
When they got back home, the catch was divided up, and for his share the farmer received the large bull seal and both the front and the hind flippers of the two young pups. In the evening, when the head of the large seal and the limbs of the small ones had been cooked for dinner, there was a great crash in the smoke-room, and the seal woman appeared in the form of a terrifying troll; she sniffed at the food in the troughs and cried the curse: ‘Here lie the head of my husband with his broad nostrils, the hand of Hárek and the foot of Fredrik! Now there shall be revenge, revenge on the men of Mikladalur, and some will die at sea and others fall from the mountain tops, until there be as many dead as can link hands all round the shores of the isle of Kalsoy!’ When she had pronounced these words, she vanished with a great crash of thunder and was never seen again.

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