snickelway

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English[edit]

English Wikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Alternative forms[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Blend of snicket +‎ ginnel +‎ alleyway. Coined by Mark W. Jones in 1983 in his book A Walk Around the Snickelways of York.

Noun[edit]

snickelway (plural snickelways)

  1. (Yorkshire) A narrow alley between buildings.
    • 2010, Donald Olson, London For Dummies, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, York: Ancient Walls and Snickelways, page 286:
      Soak up the city's history while exploring its maze of ancient streets and snickelways (hidden alleyways); you can get everywhere on foot and see many attractions in just a day.
    • 2011, Jonathan Stroud, The Golem's Eye, Random House, →ISBN, page 271:
      True, as you worm your way deeper into the Old Town, the streets become narrower and more labyrinthine, connected by a capillary system of snickelways and side courts, where the gable-overhangs become so extreme that daylight bareley hits the cobblestones below.
    • 2016 April 26, “Walk: Scenic North Yorkshire villages round the river”, in Harrogate Advertiser[1]:
      Follow Main Street, heading for St Mary’s Church, then go left down a snickelway (7) past the churchyard, which contains a railed obelisk in memory of Dr John Crosby, a good friend of Branwell Bronte.

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