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121 rustle
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122 prowl
(to move about stealthily in order to steal, attack, catch etc: Tigers were prowling in the jungle.) rôder- prowler- be on the prowl -
123 rustle
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124 prowl
(to move about stealthily in order to steal, attack, catch etc: Tigers were prowling in the jungle.) rondar- prowler- be on the prowl -
125 rustle
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126 bɛw
verbsteal--------a kind of red and yellow European cotton cloth--------embezzle--------quickly--------snatch--------take away -
127 stehlen
das Stehlenthieving* * *steh|len ['ʃteːlən] pret stahl [ʃtaːl] ptp gestohlen [gə'ʃtoːlən]1. vtito stealjdm die Ruhe stéhlen — to disturb sb
jdm die Zeit stéhlen — to waste sb's time
See:→ Elster, Schau2. vrto stealsich in das/aus dem Haus stéhlen — to steal into/out of the house
sich aus der Verantwortung stéhlen —
See:→ auch gestohlen* * *1) ((American) to steal (cattle etc).) rustle2) (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).) steal3) (to steal: He is always thieving my pencils.) thieve* * *steh·len<stahl, gestohlen>[ˈʃte:lən]I. vt▶ das/er/sie usw. kann mir gestohlen bleiben! (fam) to hell with it/him/her etc.! fam, he/she etc. can go take a running jump! fam▶ dem lieben Gott die Zeit \stehlen to laze the time away▶ jdm die Zeit \stehlen to take up [or waste] sb's timeII. vi to steales wird dort viel gestohlen there's a lot of stealing thereIII. vr* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives, intransitives Verb steal2.unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb steal; creep* * *stehlen; stiehlt, stahl, hat gestohlenA. v/t & v/i1. steal (jemandem etwas sth from sb); (plagiieren) auch umg lift (aus, von from);sie haben ihm sein ganzes Geld gestohlen they stole all his money (from him), they robbed him of all his money;er ist rausgeflogen, weil er gestohlen hat he was thrown out because he stole;ich glaube, sie stiehlt I think she steals (things)jemandem die Zeit stehlen fig waste sb’s time;er hat mir einen ganzen Tag gestohlen he wasted a whole day of my time;jemandem den Schlaf/die Ruhe stehlen rob ( oder deprive) sb of his ( oder her) sleep/peace and quiet;woher nehmen und nicht stehlen? umg where on earth can one get hold of such a thing (short of stealing it)?; → gestohlenB. v/r:* * *1.unregelmäßiges transitives, intransitives Verb steal2.unregelmäßiges reflexives Verb steal; creep* * *v.(§ p.,pp.: stahl, gestohlen)= to cabbage v.to pilfer v.to steal (from) v.to thieve (from) v. -
128 rauben
vt/i (Geld etc.) steal; (Kind) kidnap; Fuchs etc.: (Hühner etc.) make off with; jemandem etw. rauben steal s.th. from s.o.; auch fig. rob s.o. of s.th.; rauben und plündern rob and loot; jemandem den Atem rauben take s.o.’s breath away; jemandem den Schlaf etc. rauben rob ( oder deprive) s.o. of his ( oder her) sleep etc.; es raubt mir zu viel Zeit it takes up too much of my time* * *to steal; to rob* * *rau|ben ['raubn]1. vt1) (= wegnehmen) to stealjdm etw ráúben — to rob sb of sth
2) (= entführen) to abduct, to carry off3) (fig)jdm etw ráúben — to rob sb of sth
das hat uns viel Zeit geraubt — it cost us a lot of time
jdm einen Kuss ráúben — to steal a kiss from sb
jdm den Schlaf/den Verstand ráúben — to rob sb of his/her sleep/reason
jdm den Atem ráúben — to take sb's breath away
jdm die Unschuld ráúben (obs, iro) — to take sb's virginity
du raubst mir noch den letzten Nerv! — you'll drive me mad or crazy (inf)
2. vito rob, to plunder, to pillage* * *1) (to steal (something) from a vehicle: Thieves hijacked $20,000 worth of whisky from a lorry.) hijack2) (to cause great damage, destruction etc to (countryside etc).) rape3) (to steal: The document had been rifled.) rifle* * *rau·ben[ˈraubn̩]I. vt1. (stehlen)▪ [jdm] etw \rauben to rob [sb of] sth, to steal sth [from sb]sie raubten ihm das Radio aus dem Auto they robbed him of [or stole] his radio from his car2. (entführen)▪ jdn \rauben to abduct [or kidnap] sb3. (geh)▪ jdm etw \rauben to deprive sb of sthdas hat mir viel Zeit geraubt this has cost me a lot of time; s.a. NervII. vi to rob, to plunder* * *1.transitives Verb steal; kidnap < person>jemandem etwas rauben — rob somebody of something; (geh.): (wegnehmen) deprive somebody of something
2.jemandem den Atem/die Sprache rauben — take somebody's breath away/render somebody speechless
intransitives Verb rob; (plündern) plunder* * *jemandem etwas rauben steal sth from sb; auch fig rob sb of sth;rauben und plündern rob and loot;jemandem den Atem rauben take sb’s breath away;es raubt mir zu viel Zeit it takes up too much of my time* * *1.transitives Verb steal; kidnap < person>jemandem etwas rauben — rob somebody of something; (geh.): (wegnehmen) deprive somebody of something
2.jemandem den Atem/die Sprache rauben — take somebody's breath away/render somebody speechless
intransitives Verb rob; (plündern) plunder* * *v.to rob v.
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
steal — verb (past stole; past participle stolen) 1》 take (something) without permission or legal right and without intending to return it. ↘dishonestly pass off (another person s ideas) as one s own. 2》 give or take surreptitiously or without… … English new terms dictionary
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
steal somebody's thunder — verb To detract from somebodys accomplishments or glory; to undermine. I dont mean to steal your thunder, but did you really do all that by yourself? … Wiktionary
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