snarler

Noun

 * 1)  one who snarls
 * 2)  a person with a disagreeable or antagonistic temperament
 * 3) * 1830, The New British novelist: comprising works by the most popular and fashionable writers of the present day, page 123:
 * Tecla was neither a snarler nor a crab, but a good simple lady; yet she was a beata — one of the most temperate species.
 * 1) * September 1867, Bertie Club Table Talk, "reported by Feuilleton", published in Scott's Monthly Magazine, volume 4, number 3, W. J. Scott (editor), page 695:
 * [...]; his acquaintance with Wordsworth, whose Midas-ears he really persuaded himself to admire ; his intercourse with Godwin ; and his close alliance with that perverse and wrong-headed but brilliant snarler, Hazlitt.
 * 1) * 1894, Henry Goldsmith, Our Alma: An Australian Story: page 51:
 * But Ned had a great opinion of Mrs. Badgery's capabilities, and though forced to admit that her unbending manner and her ability to make good use of her tongue when occasion demanded it, justified the appellation of a snarler, [...]
 * 1) One who uses a snarling iron.
 * 2)  A sausage, particularly a barbecued one.
 * 3) * Summer snarler comes up trumps, Manawatu Herald: "A Woodville Beef & Blue Cheese sausage has triumphed over out-of-town rivals in a fry-off."
 * 1) One who uses a snarling iron.
 * 2)  A sausage, particularly a barbecued one.
 * 3) * Summer snarler comes up trumps, Manawatu Herald: "A Woodville Beef & Blue Cheese sausage has triumphed over out-of-town rivals in a fry-off."