- a form of pool played with 15 red balls and six balls of other colors and a cue ball
- fool or dupe; "He was snookered by the con-man's smooth talk"
- leave one's opponent unable to take a direct shot
- Snooker is a cue sport that is played on a large green baize-covered table with pockets in each of the four corners and in the middle of each of the long side cushions. A regular (full-size) table is . ...
- The following is an encyclopedic glossary of traditional English-language terms used in the three overarching cue sports disciplines: pocket billiards (pool), which denotes a host of games played on a table with six pockets; carom billiards referring to the various carom games played on a table ...
- Snooker is a 1983 sports simulation video game published by Visions Software Factory, which simulates the game of snooker on the major home computers of that era, including Commodore 64, Commodore VIC-20, ZX Spectrum, Acorn Electron, and BBC Micro. The Amstrad CPC version was published by Amsoft.
- A cue sport, popular in the UK and other Commonwealth countries; To play snooker; To fool or bamboozle; To place the cue ball in such a position that the opponent cannot directly hit his/her required ball with it; To become or cause to become inebriated
- (snookered) to be in a situation where the cue ball position is such that one cannot directly hit the required object ball; to be in a difficult situation, especially where direct action is not possible
- (Snookered) Slang for having an opponent "hide the cue" ball or "play safe."
- (Snookers) You can run your own course, but have to hit three specific red jumps in order. You do red jump, obstacle, red jump, obstacle, red jump, obstacle – once you have completed this then you run your 2nd half of Snookers which is a set course. ...
- (n.): a type of pool game. Find out more about snooker.
- 1. a game played with cues on a rectangular baize-covered table in which the players use a cue-ball to pocket the other balls in a set order. 2. defeat; thwart.
- A game played with 21 object balls. A regulation snooker table is larger than a regulation pool table.
- To leave the opponent (accidentally or by means of a safety) so that a certain shot on a preferred object ball cannot be played directly in a straight line by normal cueing. ...
- To leave the cue ball behind blocking balls so direct access is denied to your object balls of choice.