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1 sneak
1. transitive verb1) (take) stibitzen (fam.)2) (fig.)sneak a look at somebody/something — nach jemandem/etwas schielen
3) (bring)2. intransitive verbsneak something/somebody into a place — etwas/jemanden in einen Ort schmuggeln
2) (move furtively) schleichen3. attributive adjective1) (without warning)sneak attack/raid — Überraschungsangriff, der
2)4. nounPhrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/120805/sneak_away">sneak away- sneak in* * *[sni:k] 1. verb1) (to go quietly and secretly, especially for a dishonest purpose: He must have sneaked into my room when no-one was looking and stolen the money.) sich schleichen2) (to take secretly: He sneaked the letter out of her drawer.) heimlich nehmen2. noun(a mean, deceitful person, especially a telltale.) die Petze- sneakers- sneaking
- sneaky
- sneakiness* * *[sni:k]I. vi1. (move stealthily) schleichento \sneak in/out [sich akk] hinein-/hinausschleichen▪ to \sneak on sb jdn verpetzenII. vt1. (view secretly)to \sneak a look [or glance] at sb/sth einen verstohlenen Blick auf jdn/etw werfen▪ to \sneak sb/sth in/out jdn/etw hinein-/herausschmuggeln* * *[sniːk]1. nSchleicher( in) m(f); (dated Brit SCH inf) Petzer m, Petze f (SCH inf)2. vthe sneaked a cake off the counter — er klaute or stibitzte einen Kuchen vom Tresen (inf)
to sneak sth into a room — etw in ein Zimmer schmuggeln
to sneak a look at sb/sth — auf jdn/etw schielen
3. vi1)to sneak away or off — sich wegschleichen or -stehlen
to sneak past sb — (sich) an jdm vorbeischleichen
to sneak up on sb — sich an jdn heranschleichen
to sneak on sb — jdn verpetzen (inf)
* * *sneak [sniːk]A v/i prät und pperf -ed, US auch snuck [snʌk]1. (sich) schleichen:sneak up on sb (sich) an jemanden heranschleichen;2. huschen, wischen3. fig peja) leisetretenb) kriechen, katzbuckeln4. SCHULE Br umg petzen:sneak on sb jemanden verpetzenB v/t2. umg stibitzen:sneak a drink heimlich einen kippen;sneak a goal SPORT abstauben;sneak a look at heimlich einen Blick werfen auf (akk)C s1. peja) Leisetreter(in)b) Kriecher(in)2. SCHULE Br umg Petze fD adj heimlich:* * *1. transitive verb1) (take) stibitzen (fam.)2) (fig.)sneak a look at somebody/something — nach jemandem/etwas schielen
3) (bring)2. intransitive verbsneak something/somebody into a place — etwas/jemanden in einen Ort schmuggeln
2) (move furtively) schleichen3. attributive adjectivesneak attack/raid — Überraschungsangriff, der
2)4. nounPhrasal Verbs:- sneak in* * *v.heranschleichen v.schleichen v.(§ p.,pp.: schlich, ist geschlichen)
См. также в других словарях:
Sneak — (sn[=e]k), v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Sneaked} (sn[=e]kt); p. pr. & vb. n. {Sneaking}.] [OE. sniken, AS. sn[=i]can to creep; akin to Dan. snige sig; cf. Icel. sn[=i]kja to hanker after.] 1. To creep or steal (away or about) privately; to come or go… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
sneak´ing|ly — sneak|ing «SNEE kihng», adjective. 1. meanly or deceitfully underhand; cowardly or contemptible; concealed. SYNONYM(S): skulking, slinking. 2. that one cannot justify or does not like to confess: »He had a sneaking suspicion that his mother knew… … Useful english dictionary
sneak|ing — «SNEE kihng», adjective. 1. meanly or deceitfully underhand; cowardly or contemptible; concealed. SYNONYM(S): skulking, slinking. 2. that one cannot justify or does not like to confess: »He had a sneaking suspicion that his mother knew about the… … Useful english dictionary
sneak — sneak1 [sni:k] v past tense and past participle sneaked or snuck [snʌk] AmE ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(go secretly)¦ 2¦(take/give secretly)¦ 3 sneak a look/glance/peek 4¦(steal)¦ Phrasal verbs sneak on somebody sneak up ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [ … Dictionary of contemporary English
sneak — I UK [sniːk] / US [snɪk] verb Word forms sneak : present tense I/you/we/they sneak he/she/it sneaks present participle sneaking past tense sneaked UK [sniːkt] / US [snɪkt] or snuck UK [snʌk] / US past participle sneaked or snuck 1) [intransitive] … English dictionary
sneak — 1 verb past tense and past participle sneaked, snuck, AmE 1 (intransitive always + adv/prep) to go somewhere secretly and quietly in order to avoid being seen or heard (+ in/past/around etc): They managed to sneak past the guard on the gate. 2… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Sneak Preview (album) — Infobox Album Name = Sneak Preview Type = Studio Artist = Sneak Preview (King s X) Released = 1983 Recorded = Dyna Might Studios Springfield, MO. Genre = Rock Length = Label = Independent Producer = John Gott and Sneak Preview Reviews = Last… … Wikipedia
sneak — sneak1 [ snik ] (past tense and past participle sneaked [ snikd ] or snuck [ snʌk ] ) verb 1. ) intransitive to move somewhere quietly and secretly so that no one can see you or hear you: She sneaked into the house by the back entrance. While his … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
sneak — [sniːk] (past tense and past participle sneaked [sniːkt] snuck; [snʌk] ) verb I 1) [I] to move somewhere quietly and secretly so that no one can see you or hear you 2) [T] to take someone or something secretly or illegally • sneak up II noun [C]… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
sneak — [c]/snik / (say sneek) verb (sneaked or, Colloquial, snuck, sneaking) –verb (i) 1. to go (about, along, in, off …
sneak — 1. noun /sniːk/ A mean, sneaking fellow. 2. verb /sniːk/ a) To creep or steal (away or about) privately; to come or go meanly, as a person afraid or ashamed to be seen; to sneak away from company. b) To hide, especially in a mean or cowardly… … Wiktionary