Green’s Dictionary of Slang

snork n.

[SE snork, a piglet]
(Aus./N.Z./US)

1. (also snorky) a young man, a boy .

[US]Boston Blade 10 June n.p.: Young snorkies, whose high, stiff dickies, threatened the amputation of their ears [...] the snorkies, pimps and prostitutes may be likened to the froth [i.e. on respectable society].
[US]T.V. Olsen Hard Men (1974) 147: You wasn’t fooling, was you snork?
[Aus]J. McNeil Chocolate Frog.

2. a baby.

[Aus]Baker Popular Dict. Aus. Sl. 68: Snork, a baby.
[Aus]L. Glassop We Were the Rats 273: Got a scar on his hand, but probably he’s had it since he was a little snork.
[NZ]D. Davin For the Rest of Our Lives 366: I shouldn’t be sorry to think I’d left a small snork somewhere behind me.
[US]Honolulu Advertiser (HI) 15 Oct. 7/3: Snork — a baby (Aussie slang).
[Aus] ‘Whisper All Aussie Dict.’ in Kings Cross Whisper (Sydney) xl 4/4: snorks: Small children.
[Aus]R. Aven-Bray Ridgey-Didge Oz Jack Lang 43: Snork Child.
[NZ]McGill Dict. of Kiwi Sl. 106/1: snork baby; corruption of ‘stork’, the alleged bearer of babies.
[NZ]McGill Reed Dict. of N.Z. Sl. [as cit. 1988].
[UK]Guardian 16 Sept. 41/4: Snork — Ozzie slang for baby.