But music snobbery is exhausting and more than a bit junior year of high school.
There has long been snobbery about winemakers who don't own (all of) their own vineyards.
WSJ: The New Master of Affordable White Burgundies | On Wine by Lettie Teague
In a clear case of reverse snobbery, it is understatement that indicates his importance.
The snobbery of the north towards supposedly backward Naples was (and still is) striking.
In short, there are enormous amounts of richly textured snobbery at the high end of biglaw.
Her Irish family thought her makeover as Mrs Lanchester in faraway Hong Kong a form of snobbery.
They see this elitism, this excessive privilege and this snobbery--and I don't think we want more of that.
And if users continue to resemble basted turkeys, fake tan will continue to be the target of snobbery.
And Europe's sense of distance, he believes, is not just a matter of economic self-confidence but of cultural snobbery.
Perhaps writers, unlike actors and scientists, live in a world of inverted snobbery.
Businesses also complain that vocational training does not get the prominence it deserves and is a victim of educational "snobbery".
The authorship controversy turns on two things: snobbery and the assumption that, in a literal way, you are what you write.
There is snobbery within practice groups based on who is getting the good work and who is billing the most hours.
Denton seemed to relish the opportunity to recast the debate over whether the phone was illegally obtained in terms of, essentially, snobbery.
The musical snobbery melts away like the last of the spring snowfall.
In sum, it's just the thing for turning snobbery on its head.
Rubin argues that the visceral hatred that many American Jews express towards Palin is effectively an issue of class hatred, or snobbery.
Left unchecked, comedy snobbery can squeeze the joy out of the enterprise.
Because I would have thought it was the exact opposite of snobbery.
WSJ: The Weekend Interview with Julian Fellowes: The Anti-Snobbery of 'Downton Abbey'
Some of the snobbery surrounding language use and accents has disappeared.
Some popular culprits, such as short-termism in the City and a fondness for takeovers, or the public schools and anti-business snobbery, he dismisses out of hand.
Mr Tarr said teaching should be rigorous and challenging, but it was "academic snobbery" to say you could only study history by taking lots of detailed notes.
In his book The Virtue of Our Vices, philosophy professor Emrys Westacott argues for giving into our temptations when it comes to habits such as gossip, rudeness or snobbery.
That reflects everything from tastes in food (Coca-Cola rather than Chianti) to holidays (Florida rather than Florence), and raises the suspicion that upper-class anti-Americanism may be surrogate snobbery.
ECONOMIST: British anti-Americanism is a muddle not a menace
In this decade, the revival of traditional craftsmanship and homegrown food has generally been seen as a progressive cause, loosely aligned with environmentalism, blue-state snobbery, and all-purpose anti-corporate activism.
The South Carolina rice farmer, who died in 1873, is said to have "despised affectation and looked with perfect contempt upon all snobbery, " according to a book about his life.
Its one frustration is that it has largely failed to crack the market for sales to government, where snobbery and conservatism help ensure the dominance of the big American brands.
And, if you are tickled as much by curiosity as snobbery, the potted histories of families do reveal intriguing patterns that spell warnings of doom or suggest tendencies to excellence.
应用推荐