snap shot
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]snap shot (plural snap shots)
- (soccer) A hard shot without much planning.
- 2011 January 29, Ian Hughes, “Southampton 1 - 2 Man Utd”, in BBC[1]:
- But the League One side's early endeavours brought only two well-struck but off-target free-kicks and a snap shot from Rickie Lambert.
- (field hockey or ice hockey) A quick shot executed by moving the stick parallel to the ground and ending with a snap of the wrist.
- 2014, Chris Peters, Girls' Hockey, →ISBN, page 15:
- The other maior shot is the snap shot. It is like a cousin of the wrist shot. It is a little faster than the wrist shot and requires less movement with the stick.
- (hunting) A shot taken quickly, without time for careful aiming.
- 2010, Jay Cassell, Thomas McIntyre, The Best Hunting Stories Ever Told, →ISBN, page 474:
- Oh, i thought, a mistake, a bad one, a dumb one. i shouldn't have made the snap shot. i took a few more steps, looking for possible new blood from my hasty shot—fearing the worst—and found some.
- Alternative form of snapshot
- 2004, Noureddine Krichene, Deriving Market Expectations for the Euro-Dollar Exchange, →ISBN:
- Tentatively, the market sentiment on May 5, 2004 could be described as favoring greater stability around the forward, however with a bias for a dollar depreciation. This is only a snap shot of expectations.
- 2009, Byron R. Harrell, Supercharged Giving, →ISBN, page 102:
- The people in the family are alive and dynamic and change whereas the snap shot is a fixed image of how they appeared in the past.