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1 крадлив
thievish, pilfering, light-fingeredюр. larcenous* * *крадлѝв,прил. thievish, pilfering, light-/sticky-fingered; юр. larcenous.* * *as thievish as a magpie (като сврака); light-fingered* * *1. thievish, pilfering, light-fingered 2. юр. larcenous -
2 bradach
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3 побуждение к воровству
Побуждения к воровству говорят нам о том, что нам нужно, с кем мы уже тайно связаны родством и что мы должны интегрировать. — Thievish impulses tell what we need, to whom we are already tacitly related in kinship, and what we need to integrate.
Russian-English Dictionary "Microeconomics" > побуждение к воровству
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4 вороватый
вороватый взгляд, вороватые глаза — thievish look
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5 злодійкуватий
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6 hırsızca
thievish -
7 zlodějský
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8 muslo
• thievish• thigh armor -
9 varasteleva
• thievish -
10 furtificus
thievish. -
11 tyvaktig
thievish -
12 воровской
thievish; thieves -
13 əliəyri
thievish, dishonest -
14 mahilig sa pagnanakaw
thievish -
15 eli uzun
thievish, light-fingered -
16 вороватый
разг.
thievish* * ** * *thievish; furtive, stealthy* * *furtivelight-fingeredpickingthievish -
17 κλέπτω
Grammatical information: v.Meaning: `steal, conceal, do secretly, cheat, deceive'.Other forms: Aor. κλέψαι (Il.), pass. κλεφθῆναι (Hdt., E.), κλαπῆναι (Th., Pl.), ptc. κλεπείς (pap. IIp), fut. κλέψω (h. Merc.), perf. κέκλοφα (Att.), ptc. κεκλεβώς (Andania Ia; hyperdialectic?, Schwyzer 722), midd. κέκλεμμαι (S.), κέκλαμμαι (Ar.),Compounds: also with prefix as ἀπο-, ἐκ-, δια-, ὑπο-. As 2. member in βοῦ-κλεψ (S. Fr. 318), as 1. member in governing compounds, e. g. κλεψί-φρων `guileful' (Hermes, h. Merc.); from κλέψαι, cf. Knecht Τερψίμβροτος 38, Zumbach Neuerungen 21; on κλεψύδρα s. v.Derivatives: A. With ε-vowel: κλέπος n. `theft' (Sol. ap. Poll. 8, 34). 2. κλέμμα `theft, deceit, ruse of war' (Att.) with κλεμμάδιος `stolen' (Pl.; after ἀμφάδιος, κρυπτάδιος, Chantraine Formation 39). 3. κλεπία κλοπή (Phot.). 4. κλέπτης m. `thieve' (Il.), superl. κλεπτίστατος (Ar.; Leumann Mus. Helv. 2, 10ff.). Diminut. κλεπτίσκος (Eup.), - τάριον (Charis.), joking Patronym. κλεπτίδης (Pherecr.); fem. κλέπτις (Alciphr.), κλέπτρια (Sotad. Com.; formally from κλεπτήρ, Fraenkel Nom. ag. 1, 75); adj. κλεπτικός `thievish' (Pl., Luc.); abstract κλεπτο-σύνη `thievishness' (τ 396, Man.; Porzig Satzinhalte 226, Wyss - συνη 25). 5. κλεπτήρ `thieve' (Man.; cf. Fraenkel 1, 75). 6. κλέπιμος `smuggled' (pap. IIIa; hardly with Arbenz Die Adj. auf - ιμος 100 to the old and rare κλέπος but rather from κλόπιμος with ε after κλέπτω); 7. κλεψιμαῖος `won through theft' (LXX; juridical term, Chantraine Mél. Maspero 2, 220; *κλέψις only as 1. member). - B. With ο-vowel. 1. κλοπή `theft, secret act' (trag., att.) with κλοπαῖος `won through theft' (Att.), κλόπιμος `id., thievish' (Ps.-Phoc.), - ιμαῖος = κλεψιμαῖος (s. above; Luc., Ant. Lib.), κλοπικός `thievish' (Hermes, Pl. Kra. 407e; cf. Chantraine Ét. sur le vocab. gr. 142); ἐπί-κλοπος `deceitful' (Il.; Porzig Satzinhalte 249) with ἐπικλοπίη (Nonn.); Έπικλόπειος surn. of Zeus (H.); ὑπό-κλοπος, s. below 2. κλοπός `thieve' (h. Merc. 276, Opp.) with κλόπιος `deceitful, thievish' (ν 295, AP, APl.). 3. κλοπεύς `thieve, secret author' (S.) with κλοπεύω `plunder' (App.), κλοπεία (Str.; v. l. - ω-), - εῖον `stolen good' (Max.). 4. iteratives present ὑπο-κλοπέοιτο `conceal oneself' (χ 382; ὑπο-κλέπτειν Pi., ὑπό-κλοπος `deceitful, false' B.; cf. Schwyzer-Debrunner 524). - C. With ω-vowel. 1. κλώψ `thieve' (Hdt., E., X.) with κλωπικός `secretly' (E. Rh. 205 a. 512; Chantraine Ét. 119), κλωπήϊος `id.' (A.R., Max.), κλωπεύω (X., Luc.), - εία (Att.); 2. iteratives present κλωπάομαι = κλέπτομαι (H.).Etymology: With the aorist κλέψαι agrees exactly Lat. clepsī; against the τ-(Jot-)present κλέπτω Latin and Germanic have a prob. older (Schwyzer 704) thematic root present Lat. clepō = Goth. hlifan `steal'. An isolated nominal deriv. is perh. preserved in MIr. cluain `deceit, flattery' \< * klop-ni-. Note with diff. anlaut Lith. slepiù, slẽpti `conceal'; from skl-?, or rather a cross or rhyming formation? - Not to καλύπτω (s. v.). W.-Hofmann s. clepō, Feist Vgl. Wb. d. got. Spr. s. hlifan.Page in Frisk: 1,870-871Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κλέπτω
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18 Επικλοπώτερον
Ἐπίκλοποςthievish: masc acc comp sgἘπίκλοποςthievish: neut nom /voc /acc comp sgἘπίκλοποςthievish: adverbial -
19 Ἐπικλοπώτερον
Ἐπίκλοποςthievish: masc acc comp sgἘπίκλοποςthievish: neut nom /voc /acc comp sgἘπίκλοποςthievish: adverbial -
20 επικλοπώτερον
ἐπίκλοποςthievish: masc acc comp sgἐπίκλοποςthievish: neut nom /voc /acc comp sgἐπίκλοποςthievish: adverbial
См. также в других словарях:
Thievish — Thiev ish, a. 1. Given to stealing; addicted to theft; as, a thievish boy, a thievish magpie. [1913 Webster] 2. Like a thief; acting by stealth; sly; secret. [1913 Webster] Time s thievish progress to eternity. Shak. [1913 Webster] 3. Partaking… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
thievish — index furtive, larcenous, stealthy Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
thievish — mid 15c., of or pertaining to thieves, from THIEVE (Cf. thieve) + ISH (Cf. ish). Meaning inclined to steal is from 1530s. Related: Thievishly; thievishness … Etymology dictionary
thievish — [thē′vish] adj. 1. addicted to thieving, or stealing 2. of, like, or characteristic of a thief; stealthy; furtive thievishly adv. thievishness n … English World dictionary
thievish — thievishly, adv. thievishness, n. /thee vish/, adj. 1. given to thieving. 2. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of a thief; stealthy: a furtive, thievish look. [1400 50; late ME thevisch; see THIEF, ISH1] * * * … Universalium
thievish — thiev•ish [[t]ˈθi vɪʃ[/t]] adj. 1) given to thieving 2) of, pertaining to, or characteristic of a thief; sneaky: a thievish look[/ex] • Etymology: 1400–50 thiev′ish•ly, adv. thiev′ish•ness, n … From formal English to slang
thievish — thieving / thievish [adj] criminal crooked, cunning, dishonest, fraudulent, furtive, kleptomaniacal*, larcenous, light fingered*, pilfering, piratic*, plunderous, predatory, rapacious, secretive, sly, spoliative, stealthy, stickyfingered*;… … New thesaurus
thievish — thieve ► VERB ▪ be a thief; steal things. DERIVATIVES thievery noun thievish adjective … English terms dictionary
thievish — adjective Date: 14th century 1. of, relating to, or characteristic of a thief 2. given to stealing • thievishly adverb • thievishness noun … New Collegiate Dictionary
thievish — adjective a) Having a tendency to steal b) Having the manner of a thief; furtive … Wiktionary
thievish — I (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. stealthy, furtive, cunning; see light fingered , secretive , sly 1 . II (Roget s Thesaurus II) adjective Tending to larceny: larcenous. See CRIMES … English dictionary for students