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1 steal
[sti:l]past tense - stole; verb1) (to take (another person's property), especially secretly, without permission or legal right: Thieves broke into the house and stole money and jewellery; He was expelled from the school because he had been stealing (money).) stjæle2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.) stjæle3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.) snige sig* * *[sti:l]past tense - stole; verb1) (to take (another person's property), especially secretly, without permission or legal right: Thieves broke into the house and stole money and jewellery; He was expelled from the school because he had been stealing (money).) stjæle2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.) stjæle3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.) snige sig -
2 to steal
at stjæle -
3 prowl
(to move about stealthily in order to steal, attack, catch etc: Tigers were prowling in the jungle.) snige sig rundt- prowler- be on the prowl* * *(to move about stealthily in order to steal, attack, catch etc: Tigers were prowling in the jungle.) snige sig rundt- prowler- be on the prowl -
4 rustle
1) (to (make something) make a soft, whispering sound: The wind rustled in the trees; She rustled her papers.) rasle2) ((American) to steal (cattle etc).) stjæle•- rustler- rustle up* * *1) (to (make something) make a soft, whispering sound: The wind rustled in the trees; She rustled her papers.) rasle2) ((American) to steal (cattle etc).) stjæle•- rustler- rustle up -
5 filch
[fil ](to steal something, especially of little value: Who has filched my pen?) negle; hugge* * *[fil ](to steal something, especially of little value: Who has filched my pen?) negle; hugge -
6 hijack
1. verb1) (to take control of (an aeroplane) while it is moving and force the pilot to fly to a particular place.) kapre2) (to stop and rob (a vehicle): Thieves hijacked a lorry carrying $20,000 worth of whisky.) kapre3) (to steal (something) from a vehicle: Thieves hijacked $20,000 worth of whisky from a lorry.) kapre2. noun(the act of hijacking.) kapring- hijacker* * *1. verb1) (to take control of (an aeroplane) while it is moving and force the pilot to fly to a particular place.) kapre2) (to stop and rob (a vehicle): Thieves hijacked a lorry carrying $20,000 worth of whisky.) kapre3) (to steal (something) from a vehicle: Thieves hijacked $20,000 worth of whisky from a lorry.) kapre2. noun(the act of hijacking.) kapring- hijacker -
7 impel
[im'pel]past tense, past participle - impelled; verb(to urge or force: Hunger impelled the boy to steal.) tvinge* * *[im'pel]past tense, past participle - impelled; verb(to urge or force: Hunger impelled the boy to steal.) tvinge -
8 intend
[in'tend] 1. verb1) (to mean or plan (to do something or that someone else should do something): Do you still intend to go?; Do you intend them to go?; Do you intend that they should go too?) mene; have til hensigt2) (to mean (something) to be understood in a particular way: His remarks were intended to be a compliment.) mene3) ((with for) to direct at: That letter/bullet was intended for me.) mene; beregne•- intent2. noun(purpose; what a person means to do: He broke into the house with intent to steal.) hensigt- intentional
- intentionally
- intently* * *[in'tend] 1. verb1) (to mean or plan (to do something or that someone else should do something): Do you still intend to go?; Do you intend them to go?; Do you intend that they should go too?) mene; have til hensigt2) (to mean (something) to be understood in a particular way: His remarks were intended to be a compliment.) mene3) ((with for) to direct at: That letter/bullet was intended for me.) mene; beregne•- intent2. noun(purpose; what a person means to do: He broke into the house with intent to steal.) hensigt- intentional
- intentionally
- intently -
9 loot
[lu:t] 1. noun(something which is stolen: The thieves got away with a lot of loot.) bytte2. verb(to rob or steal from (a place): The soldiers looted the shops of the captured town.) plyndre* * *[lu:t] 1. noun(something which is stolen: The thieves got away with a lot of loot.) bytte2. verb(to rob or steal from (a place): The soldiers looted the shops of the captured town.) plyndre -
10 pilfer
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11 pinch
[pin ] 1. verb1) (to squeeze or press tightly (flesh), especially between the thumb and forefinger: He pinched her arm.) nive; klemme2) (to hurt by being too small or tight: My new shoes are pinching (me).) klemme3) (to steal: Who pinched my bicycle?) hugge2. noun1) (an act of pinching; a squeeze or nip: He gave her a pinch on the cheek.) klem2) (a very small amount; what can be held between the thumb and forefinger: a pinch of salt.) anelse•- pinched- feel the pinch* * *[pin ] 1. verb1) (to squeeze or press tightly (flesh), especially between the thumb and forefinger: He pinched her arm.) nive; klemme2) (to hurt by being too small or tight: My new shoes are pinching (me).) klemme3) (to steal: Who pinched my bicycle?) hugge2. noun1) (an act of pinching; a squeeze or nip: He gave her a pinch on the cheek.) klem2) (a very small amount; what can be held between the thumb and forefinger: a pinch of salt.) anelse•- pinched- feel the pinch -
12 plunder
1. verb(to rob or steal from (a place): The soldiers plundered and looted (the city).) plyndre2. noun(the things stolen: They ran off with their plunder.) bytte* * *1. verb(to rob or steal from (a place): The soldiers plundered and looted (the city).) plyndre2. noun(the things stolen: They ran off with their plunder.) bytte -
13 pocket
['pokit] 1. noun1) (a small bag sewn into or on to clothes, for carrying things in: He stood with his hands in his pockets; a coat-pocket; ( also adjective) a pocket-handkerchief, a pocket-knife.) lomme; -lomme; lomme-2) (a small bag attached to the corners and sides of a billiard-table etc to catch the balls.) lomme; net3) (a small isolated area or group: a pocket of warm air.) lomme4) ((a person's) income or amount of money available for spending: a range of prices to suit every pocket.) indkomst; pengepung2. verb1) (to put in a pocket: He pocketed his wallet; He pocketed the red ball.) stikke i lommen2) (to steal: Be careful he doesn't pocket the silver.) putte i lommen•- pocket-book
- pocket-money
- pocket-sized
- pocket-size* * *['pokit] 1. noun1) (a small bag sewn into or on to clothes, for carrying things in: He stood with his hands in his pockets; a coat-pocket; ( also adjective) a pocket-handkerchief, a pocket-knife.) lomme; -lomme; lomme-2) (a small bag attached to the corners and sides of a billiard-table etc to catch the balls.) lomme; net3) (a small isolated area or group: a pocket of warm air.) lomme4) ((a person's) income or amount of money available for spending: a range of prices to suit every pocket.) indkomst; pengepung2. verb1) (to put in a pocket: He pocketed his wallet; He pocketed the red ball.) stikke i lommen2) (to steal: Be careful he doesn't pocket the silver.) putte i lommen•- pocket-book
- pocket-money
- pocket-sized
- pocket-size -
14 rifle
1. noun(a gun with a long barrel, fired from the shoulder: The soldiers are being taught to shoot with rifles.) gevær; riffel2. verb1) (to search (through something): The thief rifled through the drawers.) gennemsøge2) (to steal: The document had been rifled.) stjæle•* * *1. noun(a gun with a long barrel, fired from the shoulder: The soldiers are being taught to shoot with rifles.) gevær; riffel2. verb1) (to search (through something): The thief rifled through the drawers.) gennemsøge2) (to steal: The document had been rifled.) stjæle• -
15 rob
[rob]past tense, past participle - robbed; verb1) (to steal from (a person, place etc): He robbed a bank / an old lady; I've been robbed!) røve2) ((with of) to take (something) away from; to deprive of: An accident robbed him of his sight at the age of 21.) fratage; røve•- robber- robbery* * *[rob]past tense, past participle - robbed; verb1) (to steal from (a person, place etc): He robbed a bank / an old lady; I've been robbed!) røve2) ((with of) to take (something) away from; to deprive of: An accident robbed him of his sight at the age of 21.) fratage; røve•- robber- robbery -
16 scheme
[ski:m] 1. noun1) (a plan or arrangement; a way of doing something: a colour scheme for the room; There are various schemes for improving the roads.) plan; -plan2) (a (usually secret) dishonest plan: His schemes to steal the money were discovered.) plan2. verb(to make (especially dishonest) schemes: He was punished for scheming against the President; They have all been scheming for my dismissal.) lave intriger- schemer- scheming* * *[ski:m] 1. noun1) (a plan or arrangement; a way of doing something: a colour scheme for the room; There are various schemes for improving the roads.) plan; -plan2) (a (usually secret) dishonest plan: His schemes to steal the money were discovered.) plan2. verb(to make (especially dishonest) schemes: He was punished for scheming against the President; They have all been scheming for my dismissal.) lave intriger- schemer- scheming -
17 thieve
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18 wrong
[roŋ] 1. adjective1) (having an error or mistake(s); incorrect: The child gave the wrong answer; We went in the wrong direction.) forkert2) (incorrect in one's answer(s), opinion(s) etc; mistaken: I thought Singapore was south of the Equator, but I was quite wrong.) gal3) (not good, not morally correct etc: It is wrong to steal.) forkert4) (not suitable: He's the wrong man for the job.) forkert5) (not right; not normal: There's something wrong with this engine; What's wrong with that child - why is she crying?) i vejen2. adverb(incorrectly: I think I may have spelt her name wrong.) forkert3. noun(that which is not morally correct: He does not know right from wrong.) uret4. verb(to insult or hurt unjustly: You wrong me by suggesting that I'm lying.) gøre uret- wrongful- wrongfully
- wrongfulness
- wrongly
- wrongdoer
- wrongdoing
- do someone wrong
- do wrong
- do wrong
- go wrong
- in the wrong* * *[roŋ] 1. adjective1) (having an error or mistake(s); incorrect: The child gave the wrong answer; We went in the wrong direction.) forkert2) (incorrect in one's answer(s), opinion(s) etc; mistaken: I thought Singapore was south of the Equator, but I was quite wrong.) gal3) (not good, not morally correct etc: It is wrong to steal.) forkert4) (not suitable: He's the wrong man for the job.) forkert5) (not right; not normal: There's something wrong with this engine; What's wrong with that child - why is she crying?) i vejen2. adverb(incorrectly: I think I may have spelt her name wrong.) forkert3. noun(that which is not morally correct: He does not know right from wrong.) uret4. verb(to insult or hurt unjustly: You wrong me by suggesting that I'm lying.) gøre uret- wrongful- wrongfully
- wrongfulness
- wrongly
- wrongdoer
- wrongdoing
- do someone wrong
- do wrong
- do wrong
- go wrong
- in the wrong
См. также в других словарях:
steal — ► VERB (past stole; past part. stolen) 1) take (something) without permission or legal right and without intending to return it. 2) give or take surreptitiously or without permission: I stole a look at my watch. 3) move somewhere quietly or… … English terms dictionary
steal´er — steal «steel», verb, stole, sto|len, steal|ing, noun. –v.t. 1. to take (something) that does not belong to one; take dishonestly: »Robbers stole the money. Who steals my purse, st … Useful english dictionary
steal — O.E. stelan to commit a theft (class IV strong verb; past tense stæl, pp. stolen), from P.Gmc. *stelanan (Cf. O.S. stelan, O.N., O.Fris. stela, Du. stelen, O.H.G. stelan, Ger. stehlen, Goth. stilan), of unknown origin. Most IE words for steal… … Etymology dictionary
steal — vt stole, sto·len, steal·ing [Old English stelan]: to take or appropriate without right or consent and with intent to keep or make use of see also robbery, theft Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
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steal — verb Steal is used with these nouns as the subject: ↑burglar, ↑hand, ↑robber, ↑thief Steal is used with these nouns as the object: ↑ball, ↑belongings, ↑car, ↑cattle, ↑election, ↑glance, ↑ … Collocations dictionary
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steal — Verb: To commit larceny. Daugherty v Thomas, 174 Mich 371, 140 NW 615. To take without right or leave, with intent to keep wrongfully, the goods of another. Grooms v State, 85 Fla 413, 96 So 296. Noun: A taking by larceny or theft. In the broad… … Ballentine's law dictionary
steal away — verb leave furtively and stealthily (Freq. 1) The lecture was boring and many students slipped out when the instructor turned towards the blackboard • Syn: ↑slip away, ↑sneak away, ↑sneak off, ↑sneak out • Hypernyms: ↑ … Useful english dictionary
steal a march — verb To start early. They stole a march by taking non merchandise inventory on January 2 … Wiktionary
steal away — verb to leave secretively … Wiktionary