Meaning of snow job in English:
snow job
Translate snow job into Spanish
noun
informal North AmericanA deception or concealment of one's real motive in an attempt to flatter or persuade.
- ‘we shall need to do a snow job on him’
- ‘During the American Revolution Bicentennial in 1976, there were demonstrations all over the country against the snow job being sold by the Powers That Be.’
- ‘It's funny - I'm not really the romantic type of girl, and frequently such gestures make me view someone askance, wondering what's with the big snow job.’
- ‘He is trying to pull off the biggest snow job in political history.’
- ‘‘After a while, you learn the lingo, you learn the body language, and you know they're giving you a snow job,’ she says.’
- ‘But as per the successful snow job of U.S. operators, it seems to be confining its inquiries to international termination inputs.’
- ‘The entire population must then involve themselves in a massive snow job, trying to convince a young physician that this tiny town is the best place for him to settle.’
- ‘But an unconvinced researcher in the beleaguered petroleum industry says the sales job is really a snow job.’
- ‘Naturally, skepticism abounded about the whole thing being a snow job.’
- ‘Bottom line, this article bears all the telltale signs of a journalistic snow job.’
- ‘But what we ultimately get is a Hollywood snow job.’
- ‘Jennie has always been able to see through a snow job.’
- ‘This is just a political snow job on behalf of the union bureaucracy.’
- ‘Most players in the Middle East believe such assurances are a snow job.’
- ‘A good product really doesn't require a hard sell approach complete with a snow job in fine print.’
- ‘It was a brilliantly engineered, impeccably staffed snow job.’
- ‘So in a sense, you've done a very effective snow job.’
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