The word snack is thought to have come from the Middle English snak bite, from snaken to bite, or perhaps from Middle Dutch snacken to snap at.
snack, its the same
Hors d' oeuvres.
The word 'snack' is a noun, a word for a small amount of food eaten between meals; a word for a thing. The word 'favorite' is an adjective, a word used to describe the noun 'snack'.
Three letter words from the letters in 'snack' are Can and ask.
Snack is a perfectly acceptable word in England.
There isn't any homophone for the word 'Snack'.
Snack: a mini-meal. Merienda: a Spanish word for snack.
snack --> le goûter or le casse-croûte
Short
the origin is where the word came from but the specific origin of the word ballot is latin root word.
Yes, the word 'snacks' is a common noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'snack', a general word for a small amount of food eaten between meals.The word 'snacks' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to snack.
The word "origin" is derived from the French word "origin" and the Latin word "originem," both of which mean, beginning, descent, birth, and rise.