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countable and uncountable, plural snots
(informal, uncountable, sometimes slightly vulgar) Mucus, especially mucus from the nose. quotations examples
Once, I remember, the little fair-haired boy had a choking fit at dinner, and a stream of snot ran out of his nose on to his plate in a way horrible to see.
c. 1948, George Orwell, Such, Such Were the Joys
(slang, countable) A contemptible child. quotations
With no warning a gang of little snots — none larger or older than I was — threw me to the ground, pulled my knickers below my knees — without any explanation, and allowed me to get up.
2010, Ernest L. Rhodes, A Coal Miner's Family at Mooseheart, page 19
(slang, obsolete) A mean fellow.
(Northern England, dialectal) The flamed out wick of a candle. examples
(US ?, figurative, informal) A blemish or encumbrance that one exercises out of something. quotations examples
Working the snot out of shoulders at full flexion and extension end ranges with isometrics can not only be the hidden key to creating more available range of motion for immobile, injury-prone shoulders, but also to help develop dormant muscle groups like the rear delts, which otherwise get little to no play in exercises intended for them.
2019 December 6, Lee Boyce, “4 Reasons You’ve Got No Rear Delts”, in T-Nation
third-person singular simple present snots, present participle snotting, simple past and past participle snotted
(transitive, intransitive) To blow, wipe, or clear (the nose). examples
(intransitive) To sniff or snivel; to produce snot, to have a runny nose. quotations examples
I was snotting all into my mouth and having to eat it, silently shuddering.
2014, Caitlin Moran, How to Build a Girl, Ebury, published 2015, page 148