she sneered At His Attempt to Speak French
She sneered at him.The crowed sneered at the unpopular band.
Mary sneered at the boy making funny faces.
He sneered at her suggestion, implying it was foolish and uninformed.
Not sure, but can any of this words be used?: Contemptuous or scornfully
Sneering is a verb.
You could say 'he said sneeringly' which is an example of the adverb, but this is better written as 'he sneered'.
sneered
adverbs can describe verbs adjectives, and other adverbs. A dictionary would suggest that you use "cruelly" instead of "cruel" as an adverb: "he sneered cruelly" I can't think of a situation where "cruel" would be the adverb. A good test for adverbs is that: 1) They often have a (-y) suffix 2) They still make grammatical sense almost anywhere in the sentence: "cruelly, he sneered" ; "he cruelly sneered"; "he sneered cruelly" .
The past tense of sneer is sneered.
I once sneered at ill fitting outfits, now, since acquiring arthritis, they're the only kind I can get into. Be careful what you sneer at!
1. To smile or laugh with facial contortions that express scorn or contempt 2. To speak or write in a scornfully jeering manner
It means to hop on a cow and ride to a shop than hop off the cow and swim with the fishies then you go to a police station and arrest a police then you take him to a pub and shoot him with a sniper rifle then a bazooka. Then you show his corpse to the police and tell them what happened, actually tell the truth though. (This may seem random but believe me its not) This word was created by by a dude that I once knew called Albert Einstein, he made this word while he was sleepwalking to get a shotgun and shoot Frankenstein.