warm If snug is in snug fit then close.
Its means to be very comfortable and not wanting to be move or moved. Also said by one of our founding fathers Benjamin Franklin.
They replace The Mughal Empire in China
It's impossible to replace.
There is no commonly accepted definition of feudalism. The word derives from the holding of land for the exchange for service and labour. It flourished between the 9th and 15th Centuries. The word/idea is of Arabic origin but in Medieval Latin the service and labour exchange was known as 'beneficium'. Later the word 'feudum' began to replace 'beneficium' in legal ducuments. The practice died out in Western Europe in the 15th Cantury
If you are asking about Acklins Island, there are eight different settlements situated across the region. The five major settlements include Snug Corner, Colonial hill, Landrail Point, Long Cary, and Castle Island.
cozy
The word snug is an adjective.
The dress was too snug to look good on her. It was a snug fit.
Yes, the word 'snug' is a noun, a singular common noun; a somewhat obscure word for a short version of a shawl or wrap and a private room at a tavern. The word 'snug' is also an adjective, a verb, and an adverb. The noun form for the adjective snug is 'snugness'.
Snug is a definition that is commonly used in the English vocabulary. The definition of the word snug has several meanings. One specific meaning is comfortable, warm and well protected.
A sentence like, "Snug as a bug in a rug."; or an original sentence:I was so snug curled up with my book I didn't want to answer the phone.
Cosy or warm
snug
There are two syllables in the word "snuggle." The syllables are "snug-gle."
Snug comes from either a Scandinavian, Dutch or German word for keeping a trim ship (also shipshape) in the late 1500's. Trim and tidy. It was originally a word used by sailors It now means cosy, comfortable as in "snug as a bug in a rug"
Jan wore her wet suit to swim in the cold water and appreciated its snug fit that kept her body warm.
The word snuggled has two syllables. Snug-gled.