3[transitiveT] (also snarl up British English)TTCTTR to preventtraffic from moving 使〔交通〕堵塞
The traffic was snarled up on both sides of the road.
路上双向的交通都堵塞了。
nGrammar
Snarl is usually passive in this meaning.
—snarl noun [countableC]
an angry snarl
怒吼
Examples from the Corpus
snarl• ""Keep your dirty hands off me, '' he snarled.• Every time he asked her a question she snarled a bad-temperedanswer.• He has too often been seen snarling and too seldom seen smiling.• Whitlock snarled angrily and tossed the Browning on to the ground.• The old steward came hurrying up, huffing and puffing, but Carey snarled at him so he slunk away.• The most important marketer for the school could be the secretary who snarls at parents when they call or phone.• They snarled at them as if they were criminals and took their papers as if they'd like to tear them to shreds.• Margarett snarled in her diary later that winter.• They're going to give us the information, but it keeps getting snarled up in paperwork.• "What do they want?" snarled Weinstein.• Roads, although often snarled with traffic, are better than in most boomingsuburbs.
Originsnarl
1. (1500-1600)snar“to snarl”((1500-1600)), from the sound.
2. (1300-1400)snarl“net for catching things”((14-19 centuries)), from → SNARE1
ADVERB | PREPOSITIONADVERB➤angrily, savagely, viciously氣憤地/惡狠狠地/充滿敵意地吼叫◇He snarled savagely at her.他向她狂吼起來。➤almost幾乎咆哮起來PREPOSITION➤at朝⋯吼◇A guard dog snarled at us as we walked by.我們路過時,一隻看門狗朝外面狂吠。