Crossword-Solution: SNOR 4 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 4

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Word Anagrams
SNOR anagram NORS, RONS, SORN, SRNO

We have 1 clue for the answer “SNOR”

Clue Answers
Had an unquiet sleep 2 answers
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Walk furtively (up to someone)
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Hint 1 meaning
To go or move with one side foremost; to move sidewise; as, to sidle through a crowd or narrow opening.
Hint 2 anagram
SEDLI
Hint 3 another clue
Move
12 +1

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Sentences with SNOR (5)

The family was in their dead sleep when Ascyltos took our fardels on his shoulders, and getting through a breach in the wall, which he had formerly taken notice of, came to the village by break of day, and meeting no one to stop him, boldly enter'd it and came up to our chamber; which the guard that was upon us, took care to secure; but the bar being of wood, he easily wrenched it with an iron crow, and waken'd us; for we snor'd in spight of fortune.
The Satyricon Petronius Arbiter 2004
Hunccine, an hunc sequeris!----_ Whether alone, or in thy Harlot's Lap, When thou wouldst take a lazy Morning's Nap; Up, up, says AVARICE; thou snor'st again, Stretchest thy Limbs, and yawn'st, but all in vain.
The Spectator, Volume 1 Joseph Addison and Richard Steele 2005
Each market-day he jogg'd along Beneath the gard'ner's load, And snor'd out many a donkey's song To friends upon the road.
Cole's Funny Picture Book No. 1 Edward William Cole 2009
Thus, I remember Lord Sigmund, my Lord Snorē’s father, set forth that year after the grain-planting was over, and until it was tall, he sailed the high seas, and brought back white furs from the North, and stories of mountains and ice-floors.
The Sentimental Vikings Richard Voorhees Risley 2010
There, just when the still noonday drew to its close, and the slanting sun was beginning to throw its afternoon brightness in our brown faces, my Lord Snorē and I lay stretched out in the long, sweet grass, he with a heavy cross-bow—a new weapon then—and the carcasses of two brown deer lying beside him, I idly talking and ever looking forth over the blinding waters for sight of his father’s ship that we might begin to expect now, the grain being tall.
The Sentimental Vikings Richard Voorhees Risley 2010