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One under 3"5. One who will constantly project vocal noise into other's undeserving ears, especially during a showing of a movie. One who may twitch violently during winter. One who makes ears bleed.
My ears were bleeding horribly because of that snods over there!
Run!
A snod just ran under me!
Snods by bluejos8 August 11, 2009
Related Words
*snods* snod snode Snodos snoss sndos Snod Juice snots plox Snous Sods curse
A person that is sneezing whilst he/she is having a snuff in his lip.
Snös by Barre Jarre September 14, 2012

Odds and Sods 

1. A variation on the on the ubiquitous expression "bits and pieces" in the U.K. A miscellany of objects, tasks, or issues.

2. A reference to a group of of unnamed individuals who are related in some general way.
1. Now that I've got the odds and sods sorted, I can relax.

2. At the monthly local council meeting, the usual assortment of odds and sods was in attendance.
Odds and Sods by NotSamuelJohnson February 12, 2010

sods law 

The theory that if it can go wrong, it will.
Man 1: Come on we'll miss the train
Man 2: Nah, we're early
Man 1: Sods law we'll miss it, so move it!
sods law by Gatefold May 20, 2007
oh my snod!
snod by irinahhh March 1, 2016
SNDS, "Sudden Northwood Death Syndrome," refers to the vulnerability of Intel's Pentium 4's "Northwood" class processors to overclocking. Overclockers soon realized that after 1.7 volts, the processor would become gradually unstable, and eventually be completely unusable. The rate at which this happens varies entirely from processor to processor. That is, to say, it could take days, or even months, but it always happens, and always occurs at 1.7 volts (or higher, which obviously accelerates SNDS). Once a processor has contracted SNDS, the prognosis is very grim. Even if you return the core (CPU) to stock speeds, the damage is already done, and could even still progress at stock voltage. Overclocking is a great way to improve hardware, but it can be dangerous and has its risks... only attempt to do so if you have a strong background in computer science.
Guy 1: I overclocked my Northwood core from 2.6 to 3.6 GHz, but I had to increase the voltage for stability.

Guy 2: How did that work out for you?

Guy 1: Everything was fine and dandy until the computer hard-locked.

Guy 2: Sounds like SNDS...
SNDS by William F. September 28, 2006