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1 steal
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2 steal
sti:lpast 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).)2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.)3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.)steal vb robartr[stiːl]————————tr[stiːl]1 robar, hurtar1 (rob) robar, hurtar2 (move quietly, creep) moverse con sigilo\SMALLIDIOMATIC EXPRESSION/SMALLto steal a glance at somebody/something echar una mirada furtiva a alguien/algoto steal a march on somebody ganarle la mano a alguien, adelantarse a alguiento steal somebody's heart robarle el corazón a alguiento steal somebody's thunder quitarle la primicia a alguiento steal the scene / steal the show acaparar la atención de todos: robar, hurtarsteal vi1) : robar, hurtar2) : ir sigilosamenteto steal away: escabullirsen.• robo s.m.v.(§ p.,p.p.: stole, stolen) = apañuscar v.• escamotear v.• garfiñar v.• gatear v.• hurtar v.• rapiñar v.• robar v.stiːl
1.
1)a) \<\<object/idea\>\> robar, hurtar (frml)b) ( sneak) (liter)to steal a glance at something/somebody — echar una mirada furtiva a algo/alguien
2) stolen past pa) <money/property> robadob) (liter) <moments/pleasures> robado, escamoteado
2.
vi1) robar, hurtar (frml)2) ( go stealthily) (+ adv compl)to steal away o off — escabullirse
they stole into the room — entraron en la habitación a hurtadillas, entraron sigilosamente en la habitación
[stiːl] (pt stole) (pp stolen)to steal up on somebody — acercarse* sigilosamente a alguien
1. VT1) (=take) [+ object] robar, hurtar frm; [+ idea] robar- steal sb's heart- steal a march on sb- steal the show- steal sb's thunder2) liter (=sneak)•
to steal a glance at sb — mirar a algn de soslayo, echar una mirada de soslayo a algn•
to steal a kiss from sb — robar un beso a algn2. VI1) (=take things) robar2) (=creep)a)• to steal into a room — entrar sigilosamente en una habitación, entrar en una habitación a hurtadillas
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to steal out of a room — salir sigilosamente de una habitación, salir de una habitación a hurtadillas•
to steal up/ down the stairs — subir/bajar sigilosamente las escaleras, subir/bajar las escaleras a hurtadillasb) (fig)•
a smile stole across her lips — una sonrisa se escapó de sus labios•
a tear stole down her cheek — una lágrima se deslizó por su mejilla•
the light was stealing through the shutters — la luz se filtraba por las contraventanas3.N* (=bargain)it's a steal — es una ganga * or un regalo *
* * *[stiːl]
1.
1)a) \<\<object/idea\>\> robar, hurtar (frml)b) ( sneak) (liter)to steal a glance at something/somebody — echar una mirada furtiva a algo/alguien
2) stolen past pa) <money/property> robadob) (liter) <moments/pleasures> robado, escamoteado
2.
vi1) robar, hurtar (frml)2) ( go stealthily) (+ adv compl)to steal away o off — escabullirse
they stole into the room — entraron en la habitación a hurtadillas, entraron sigilosamente en la habitación
to steal up on somebody — acercarse* sigilosamente a alguien
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3 steal
1. transitive verb,steal somebody's boyfriend/girlfriend — jemandem den Freund/die Freundin ausspannen (ugs.)
she was the star of the play, but the little dog stole the show — (fig.) sie war der Star des Stückes, aber der kleine Hund stahl ihr die Schau
the newcomer stole the show — ein Newcomer war der Star [des Abends]
steal the show from somebody — jemandem die Schau stehlen od. den Rang ablaufen
2) (get slyly) rauben (geh. scherzh.) [Kuss, Umarmung]; entlocken [Worte, Interview]; sich (Dat.) genehmigen (ugs. scherzh.) [Nickerchen]steal a glance [at somebody/something] — jemandem einen verstohlenen Blick zuwerfen/einen verstohlenen Blick auf etwas (Akk.) werfen
3) (fig.): (win)2. intransitive verb,stole, stolen1) stehlensteal from the till/supermarket — aus der Kasse/im Supermarkt stehlen
2) (move furtively) sich stehlensteal in/out/up — sich hinein-/hinaus-/hinaufstehlen
steal up [on somebody/something] — sich [an jemanden/etwas] heranschleichen
Phrasal Verbs:- academic.ru/111922/steal_away">steal away* * *[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).) stehlen2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.) verstohlen3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.) sich stehlen* * *[sti:l]it's a \steal! das ist ja geschenkt! famII. vt<stole, stolen>1. (take illegally)to \steal [sb's] ideas [jds] Ideen klauen fam2. (gain artfully)to \steal sb's heart [away] jds Herz erobern3. (do surreptitiously)to \steal a glance [or look] [at sb/sth] verstohlen [zu jdm/etw] hinschauenshe stole a glance at her watch sie lugte heimlich auf ihre Armbanduhr4.▶ to \steal the limelight alles andere in den Schatten stellen▶ to \steal a march on sb jdm den Rang ablaufen▶ to \steal sb's thunder jdm den Wind aus den Segeln nehmenIII. vi<stole, stolen>1. (take things illegally) stehlenhe has been convicted of \stealing er ist des Diebstahls überführt wordenhe stole out of the room er stahl sich aus dem Zimmershe stole onto the balcony sie schlich auf den Balkonas the moon rose, moonlight stole over the scene als der Mond aufging, ergoss sich das Mondlicht über die Landschafta crafty expression stole over his face ein raffinierter Ausdruck huschte über sein Gesichtanxiety was \stealing over her sie überkam Angst* * *[stiːl] vb: pret stole, ptp stolen1. vtobject, idea, kiss, heart stehlenLabour have stolen the Tories' clothes —
2. vi1) (= thieve) stehlen2) (= move quietly etc) sich stehlen, (sich) schleichento steal into a room — sich in ein Zimmer stehlen
to steal up on sb — sich an jdn heranschleichen
the mood/feeling which was stealing over the country —
he could feel happiness stealing over him to steal home (Baseball) — er fühlte, wie ihn ein Glücksgefühl überkam ungehindert zur Ausgangsbase vorrücken
3. n (US inf= bargain) Geschenk nt (inf)a total steal — ein echtes Schnäppchen (inf)
it's a steal! — das ist (ja) geschenkt! (inf)
* * *steal [stiːl]A v/t prät stole [stəʊl], pperf stolen [ˈstəʊlən]steal sth from sb jemandem etwas stehlen;steal sb’s girlfriend fig jemandem die Freundin ausspannen umgb) etwas rauben2. fig stehlen, erlisten, erhaschen:steal a kiss from sb jemandem einen Kuss rauben;steal a look at einen verstohlenen Blick werfen auf (akk); → march1 Bes Redew, show A 3, thunder A 13. fig stehlen, plagiierenB v/i1. stehlen2. schleichen, sich stehlen ( beide:out of aus):steal away sich davonstehlenC s1. umg Diebstahl m2. at that price it’s a steal bes US umg zu dem Preis ist das fast geschenkt* * *1. transitive verb,steal somebody's boyfriend/girlfriend — jemandem den Freund/die Freundin ausspannen (ugs.)
she was the star of the play, but the little dog stole the show — (fig.) sie war der Star des Stückes, aber der kleine Hund stahl ihr die Schau
the newcomer stole the show — ein Newcomer war der Star [des Abends]
steal the show from somebody — jemandem die Schau stehlen od. den Rang ablaufen
2) (get slyly) rauben (geh. scherzh.) [Kuss, Umarmung]; entlocken [Worte, Interview]; sich (Dat.) genehmigen (ugs. scherzh.) [Nickerchen]steal a glance [at somebody/something] — jemandem einen verstohlenen Blick zuwerfen/einen verstohlenen Blick auf etwas (Akk.) werfen
3) (fig.): (win)2. intransitive verb,stole, stolen1) stehlensteal from the till/supermarket — aus der Kasse/im Supermarkt stehlen
2) (move furtively) sich stehlensteal in/out/up — sich hinein-/hinaus-/hinaufstehlen
steal up [on somebody/something] — sich [an jemanden/etwas] heranschleichen
Phrasal Verbs:* * *(from) v.bestehlen v.entwenden v.stehlen v.(§ p.,pp.: stahl, gestohlen) -
4 steal
s.1 cosa robada.2 ganga, verdadera ganga.vt.1 robar, hurtar, pillar, estafar con tretas y engaños (swindle).to steal a glance at somebody dirigir una mirada furtiva a alguiento steal the show acaparar toda la atención3 pretender o arrogarse algo sin derecho,.4 introducirse clandestinamente o sin ser observado; pasar furtivamente, a hurtadilla5 cometer un robo, robar, ensuciarse las manos.6 acaparar.7 moverse furtivamente, moverse con sumo cuidado.8 irse sigilosamente, escabullirse.vi.1 robar (rob)to steal away/in/out alejarse/entrar/salir furtivamenteto steal up on somebody acercarse furtivamente a alguienmiddle age steals up on you cuando te quieres dar cuenta, eres una persona de mediana edad(pt stole ; pp stolen) -
5 ■ steal from
■ steal fromv. i. + prep.2 rubare a ( anche fig.); derubare: to steal a kiss from a girl, rubare un bacio a una ragazza; He is said to have stolen from the rich to give to the poor, si dice rubasse ai ricchi per dare i soldi ai poveri -
6 steal
sti:lpast 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).) stjele, rane til seg2) (to obtain or take (eg a look, a nap etc) quickly or secretly: He stole a glance at her.) kaste et stjålent blikk på3) (to move quietly: He stole quietly into the room.) lure/liste/snike segIsubst. \/stiːl\/1) ( hverdagslig) godt kjøp, røverkjøp, funn, noe man har fått til spottpris2) (mest amer.) tyveri3) tyvegods, noe som er stjålet4) ( politikk) list5) ( politikk) kuppII1) stjele, rane til seg, lure seg til2) smugle, liste, lure, slippe, smette3) smyge seg, liste\/lure seg4) ( basketball) vinne ballen, snappe ballensteal a glance at somebody\/something kaste et stjålent blikk på noe(n)steal a march on skaffe seg et forsprang\/fordel fremfor, overliste i smugsteal away slippe unna, smette unna\/bortsteal someone's heart ( overført) stjele noens hjertesteal someone's thunder ta ordet ut av munnen på noen, bruke noens ideer, komme noen i forkjøpet (med å si noe) -
7 steal a march on somebody
обскакать; опередить (противника)The company plans to steal a march on its competitors by offering the same computer at a lower price.
Англо-русский словарь идиом и фразовых глаголов > steal a march on somebody
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8 steal a march on somebody
Общая лексика: перебежать кому-либо дорогуУниверсальный англо-русский словарь > steal a march on somebody
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9 steal somebody's thunder
перебежать дорогу кому-либоHe was looking forward to telling his family the news and was annoyed to find that his cousin had phoned them and stolen his thunder.
Англо-русский словарь идиом и фразовых глаголов > steal somebody's thunder
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10 to steal a glance at somebody/something
to steal a glance at somebody/somethingechar una mirada furtiva a alguien/algoEnglish-spanish dictionary > to steal a glance at somebody/something
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11 to steal a march on somebody
ganarle la mano a alguien, adelantarse a alguien -
12 to steal somebody's heart
robarle el corazón a alguien -
13 to steal somebody's thunder
quitarle la primicia a alguien -
14 to relieve somebody of something
(take away) llevar 2 (steal) robar, quitarEnglish-spanish dictionary > to relieve somebody of something
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15 to steal a march on somebody
aizsteigties kādam priekšā; apsteigt kādu; nemanot apsteigt kādu -
16 to steal somebody's thunder
nozagt kāda idejas; gūt priekšrocību pār kādu; publicēt cita teoriju kā savu -
17 voler
I.voler1 [vɔle]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb• ça ne vole pas haut ! (inf) it's pretty low-level!II.voler2 [vɔle]➭ TABLE 1 transitive verba. [+ objet] ( = dérober) to steal• voler de l'argent/une idée/un baiser à qn to steal money/an idea/a kiss from sb• il ne l'a pas volé ! ( = il l'a mérité) he asked for it!• il ne l'a pas volée, cette médaille ! he worked hard for that medal!b. [+ personne] ( = dépouiller) to rob ; ( = léser) to cheat* * *vɔle
1.
1) ( dérober) to steal ( à quelqu'un from somebody)il s'est fait voler la victoire — fig he's been robbed of his victory
tu ne l'as pas volé! — fig it serves you right!
2) ( léser) to robvoler le client — to rip the customer off (colloq)
2.
verbe intransitif to flyvoler en éclats — [vitre] to shatter; fig [certitude] to be shattered
••* * *
I vɔle vi1) [avion, oiseau] to fly2) [objet] to fly
II vɔle1. vi[voleur] to steal2. vt1) (= dérober) to stealÇa n'est pas son stylo, il me l'a volé. — That's not his pen, he stole it from me.
On a volé mon appareil photo. — My camera's been stolen.
2) [personne] to rob* * *voler verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( dérober) to steal [objet, secret, baiser] (à qn from sb); on lui a volé sa voiture, il s'est fait voler sa voiture he's had his car stolen; il s'est fait voler la victoire fig he's been robbed of his victory; tu ne l'as pas volé! fig it serves you right, you asked for it!;2 ( léser) to rob; voler le client to cheat ou rob the customer; ( plus fort) to rip the customer off○; voler l'État to steal from the State; voler qn sur la quantité/le poids to cheat sb over the quantity/the weight; 500 euros? tu t'es fait voler! 500 euros? you've been ripped off!; on se fait voler dans ce magasin! you get ripped off in that shop!; on n'a pas été volés! fig we got our money's worth!B vi1 [insecte, avion, pilote] to fly; fig [poussière, plume] to fly; voler au vent [cheveux, jupe] to blow in the wind;2 ( être lancé) lit, fig [pierres, insultes] to fly; voler en éclats [vitre] to shatter; fig [certitude] to be shattered; faire voler la réputation de qn en éclats fig to shatter sb's reputation;3 ( se précipiter) voler au secours de qn to rush to sb's aid; fig voler de bouche en bouche [nouvelle] to spread like wildfire. ⇒ mouche.ça vole bas! ( c'est grivois) that's a bit near the knuckle!; ( c'est idiot) that's pretty mindless stuff![vɔle] verbe intransitifvoler de ses propres ailes to stand on one's own two feet, to fend for oneself2. [étincelles, projectile] to flyil faisait voler ses adversaires/les assiettes he was throwing his opponents around/throwing the plates in the airvoler en éclats to be smashed to bits ou to pieces3. (littéraire) [nuages, flocons] to fly (along)4. (soutenu) [se précipiter]voler vers quelqu'un/quelque chose to fly to somebody/towards something————————[vɔle] verbe transitif1. [objet, idée] to stealce n'est pas bien de voler it's wrong to steal, stealing is wrongn'avoir pas volé: je n'ai pas volé mon argent/dîner/week-end I've certainly earned my money/earned myself some dinner/earned myself a weekendtu ne l'as pas volé! [tu es bien puni] you (certainly) asked for it!, it serves you right!2. [personne] to robil s'est fait voler son portefeuille/tout son matériel hi-fi his wallet/all his stereo equipment was stolen -
18 robar
v.1 to steal (object).me han robado la moto my motorbike's been stolenrobar a alguien to rob somebodyrobar el corazón a alguien to steal somebody's heartla contabilidad me roba mucho tiempo doing the accounts takes up a lot of my timeEllos roban dinero They steal money.Ellos roban de noche They purloin at night.2 to draw.3 to rob (cobrar caro).en esa tienda te roban the prices in that shop are daylight robberyEllos roban pan They rob bread.4 to steal from, to rob, to burglarize, to burgle.María le roba a su vecina Mary steals from her neighbor.Ellos roban casas They burglarize homes.5 to rob of.* * *2 (raptar) to kidnap3 (en naipes) to draw4 figurado (cobrar muy caro) to rip off5 figurado (corazón, alma) to steal* * *verb1) to rob, steal2) abduct* * *1. VT1) [+ objeto, dinero] to steal; [+ banco] to rob¡nos han robado! — we've been robbed!
tuve que robarle horas al sueño para acabar el trabajo — I had to work into the night to finish the job
robarle el corazón a algn — liter to steal sb's heart
2) [+ atención] to steal, capture; [+ paciencia] to exhaust; [+ tranquilidad] to destroy, take away; [+ vida] to take, steal3) (=estafar) to cheat, roben ese negocio te han robado — you've been cheated o robbed in that deal
4) [+ naipes] to take, drawroba una carta de la baraja — take o draw a card from the deck
5) frm [río, corriente] to carry away6) †† (=raptar) to kidnap, abduct2. VI1) (=sisar) to stealno robarás — (Biblia) thou shalt not steal
2) (Naipes) to take a card, draw a card* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <dinero/bolso> to steal; < banco> to rob2) ( estafar) to cheat, rip off (colloq)¿$300? te robaron! — $300? you were conned! (colloq)
3) (Jueg) (en naipes, dominó) to draw, pick up (colloq)2.robar vi to stealrobaron en la casa de al lado — the house next door was burglarized (AmE) o (BrE) was burgled
* * *= steal, rob, raid, thieve, steal off, pilfer, filch, break into, break in, mug, plunder, rifle, snatch, nick, hold up.Ex. In imposing penalties for book stealing libraries are particularly helpless.Ex. This article contrasts a range of principles with the widely prevailing system of polygraphic marking which requires much manual, specialised work and which robs the resulting text of good visual presentation = Este artículo contrasta una serie de principios con el sistema prevalente de marcas poligráficas que necesita mucho trabajo manual y especializado que roba al texto resultante una buena presentación visual.Ex. The article ' Raiding the World Bank' explains how the World Bank operates, shareholding, the initiation of loan proposals, and lending to education projects.Ex. But it was no less misguided than the commonplace practice of setting passages thieved from literature for comprehension exercises.Ex. I have nothing against Aussies but I do have something against parasites who steal off someone else's ideas.Ex. In his work, Al pilfers fragments from a wide array of sources and glues them into collages.Ex. Even in poems written directly out of his own experience, he is likely to use notions, phrases, and musical ideas filched from other recent poems.Ex. A honeypot is a decoy computer system designed to look like a legitimate system an intruder will want to break into while, unbeknownst to the intruder, they are being covertly observed.Ex. The hacker broke in on the university dial-in lines through the library system.Ex. In that time, she relates, she had been mugged at gunpoint, punched in the face, and harassed.Ex. Close on such paradeground excitements comes the popular sport of plundering for projects.Ex. English, on the other hand, has been accused of waylaying other languages in dark alleys and rifling their pockets for loose vocabulary.Ex. The thieves broke into the museum using a hydraulic jack and snatched both paintings in 3 minutes.Ex. It's more advisable to have a cheap and skanky bike for pootling around town, the idea being that no-one would want to nick a nasty looking bike.Ex. The film starts with two small-time thieves who spontaneously decide to hold up a restaurant.----* robar en una tienda = shoplift.* robar ganado = rustle + cattle.* robar la credibilidad = destroy + credence.* robarle tiempo al sueño = burn + the candle at both ends.* * *1.verbo transitivo1)a) <dinero/bolso> to steal; < banco> to rob2) ( estafar) to cheat, rip off (colloq)¿$300? te robaron! — $300? you were conned! (colloq)
3) (Jueg) (en naipes, dominó) to draw, pick up (colloq)2.robar vi to stealrobaron en la casa de al lado — the house next door was burglarized (AmE) o (BrE) was burgled
* * *= steal, rob, raid, thieve, steal off, pilfer, filch, break into, break in, mug, plunder, rifle, snatch, nick, hold up.Ex: In imposing penalties for book stealing libraries are particularly helpless.
Ex: This article contrasts a range of principles with the widely prevailing system of polygraphic marking which requires much manual, specialised work and which robs the resulting text of good visual presentation = Este artículo contrasta una serie de principios con el sistema prevalente de marcas poligráficas que necesita mucho trabajo manual y especializado que roba al texto resultante una buena presentación visual.Ex: The article ' Raiding the World Bank' explains how the World Bank operates, shareholding, the initiation of loan proposals, and lending to education projects.Ex: But it was no less misguided than the commonplace practice of setting passages thieved from literature for comprehension exercises.Ex: I have nothing against Aussies but I do have something against parasites who steal off someone else's ideas.Ex: In his work, Al pilfers fragments from a wide array of sources and glues them into collages.Ex: Even in poems written directly out of his own experience, he is likely to use notions, phrases, and musical ideas filched from other recent poems.Ex: A honeypot is a decoy computer system designed to look like a legitimate system an intruder will want to break into while, unbeknownst to the intruder, they are being covertly observed.Ex: The hacker broke in on the university dial-in lines through the library system.Ex: In that time, she relates, she had been mugged at gunpoint, punched in the face, and harassed.Ex: Close on such paradeground excitements comes the popular sport of plundering for projects.Ex: English, on the other hand, has been accused of waylaying other languages in dark alleys and rifling their pockets for loose vocabulary.Ex: The thieves broke into the museum using a hydraulic jack and snatched both paintings in 3 minutes.Ex: It's more advisable to have a cheap and skanky bike for pootling around town, the idea being that no-one would want to nick a nasty looking bike.Ex: The film starts with two small-time thieves who spontaneously decide to hold up a restaurant.* robar en una tienda = shoplift.* robar ganado = rustle + cattle.* robar la credibilidad = destroy + credence.* robarle tiempo al sueño = burn + the candle at both ends.* * *robar [A1 ]vtA1 ‹dinero/joya/bolso› to steal; ‹banco› to roble robó dinero a su padre he stole some money from his fatherles robaron todos los ahorros they were robbed of all their savings, all their savings were stolenentraron pero no robaron nada they broke in but didn't steal o take anything¿quién me ha robado la regla? who's taken o stolen o ( colloq) swiped my ruler?me robó el corazón she stole my heartle robó un beso he stole a kiss from herle roba horas al sueño para poder estudiar he does o goes without sleep so that he can studyno te quiero robar más tiempo I don't want to take up any more of your time2 (raptar) ‹niño› to abduct, kidnap¿$300? ¡te robaron! $300? what a rip-off! o you were conned! ( colloq)■ robarvito stealno robarás ( Bib) thou shalt not stealrobaron en la casa de al lado the house next door was broken into o was burglarized ( AmE) o ( BrE) was burgled¡me han robado! I've been robbed!* * *
robar ( conjugate robar) verbo transitivo
1
‹ banco› to rob;
robarle algo a algn to steal sth from sb;
le robaron el bolso she had her bag stolen
2 ( estafar) to cheat, rip off (colloq)
3 (Jueg) (en naipes, dominó) to draw, pick up (colloq)
verbo intransitivo
to steal;
¡me han robado! I've been robbed!
robar verbo transitivo
1 (cosas materiales) to steal: robar algo a alguien, to steal sthg from sb
(a una persona, un banco) to rob: me robaron en la calle, I was robbed in the street
(en una casa) to burgle: anoche robaron en casa de mi vecino, my neighbour's house was burgled last night
2 (el tiempo) to take up: debo robarte unos minutos para que me expliques este problema, may I take a few minutes of your time and ask you to explain this problem to me?
le roba horas al estudio para ver la televisión, he spends hours of his study time watching TV
3 (metros de un espacio) to take off
4 Naipes to draw, pick up
To steal se aplica a lo que el ladrón se lleva (dinero, joyas, etc.). To rob se refiere al lugar desde donde se lo lleva (un banco, una casa). To burgle significa entrar en una casa con la intención de robar.
persona acto verbo
ladrón robo robar
thief theft
robber robbery to rob
to steal
burglar burglary to burgle
' robar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ladrón
- ladrona
- limpiar
- pillar
- quitar
- robo
- bolsear
- chingar
- chorear
- chorrear
- clavar
- desvalijar
- escamotear
- guindar
- soplar
- volar
English:
accuse
- appropriate
- break in
- break into
- burglar
- burglarize
- burglary
- burgle
- cop
- fall in with
- gunpoint
- have up
- make off
- nick
- pinch
- poach
- rip off
- rob
- robber
- robbery
- rustle
- scavenge
- scoop
- snatch
- steal
- stick up
- stoop
- take
- theft
- thief
- thievishness
- break
- plunder
- rip
- wrong
* * *♦ vt1. [objeto] to steal;[casa] to burgle; [banco] to rob;robar a alguien to rob sb;me han robado la moto my motorbike's been stolen;nos robaron el partido we were robbed;le robó el corazón she stole his heart;Famel que roba a un ladrón, tiene cien años de perdón it's no crime to steal from a thief2. [niño, mujer] to abduct, to kidnap3. [tiempo] to take up;te robaré sólo un minuto I'll only take up a minute of your time;la contabilidad me roba mucho tiempo doing the accounts takes up a lot of my time4. [espacio] to take away;con esta reforma le robamos unos metros al garaje this alteration will take a few square metres away from the garage5. [naipe] to draw6. [cobrar caro] to rob;en esa tienda te roban the prices in that shop are daylight robbery♦ vi1. [sustraer] to steal;han robado en una tienda del centro there's been a robbery in a shop in the town centre2. [tomar un naipe] to draw* * *v/t2 naipe take, pick up* * *robar vt1) : to steal2) : to rob, to burglarize3) secuestrar: to abduct, to kidnap4) : to captivaterobar virobar en : to break into* * *robar vb3. (casa) to burgle -
19 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. -
20 dérober
dérober [deʀɔbe]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = voler) to stealb. ( = cacher) dérober qch à la vue de qn to conceal sth from sb2. reflexive verba. ( = refuser d'assumer) to shy away (à from)b. ( = se libérer) to slip awayc. ( = s'effondrer) [sol] to give wayd. [cheval] to refuse* * *deʀɔbe
1.
2.
se dérober verbe pronominal1) ( se soustraire aux questions) to be evasive2) ( se soustraire à son devoir) to shirk responsibility3) ( se soustraire)se dérober à — to shirk [responsabilités, devoir]; to evade [question, justice]
* * *deʀɔbe vt1) (= voler) to steal2) (= cacher)dérober qch à qn; dérober qch à la vue de qn — to conceal sth from sb
* * *dérober verb table: aimerA vtrB se dérober vpr1 ( se soustraire aux questions) to be evasive, to hedge;2 ( se soustraire à son devoir) to shirk responsibility;3 ( se soustraire) se dérober à to shirk [responsabilités, devoir]; to evade, to avoid [question]; to evade [justice]; se dérober à un engagement to get out of a commitment;4 ( céder) [sol] to give way (sous under); le sol se dérobe sous leurs pieds the ground gives way under their feet; ses jambes se dérobaient sous elle her legs were giving way;[derɔbe] verbe transitif1. [voler] to steal2. [cacher]dérober quelque chose à la vue to hide ou to conceal something from view————————se dérober verbe pronominal intransitif1. [éluder la difficulté] to shy away————————se dérober à verbe pronominal plus prépositionse dérober à ses obligations to evade ou to shirk one's responsibilities
См. также в других словарях:
steal — steal, *pilfer, filch, purloin, lift, pinch, snitch, swipe, cop are comparable when they mean to take another s possession without right and without his knowledge or permission. Steal, the commonest and most general of the group, can refer to any … New Dictionary of Synonyms
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steal a kiss (from somebody) — steal a ˈkiss (from sb) idiom (literary) to kiss sb suddenly or secretly Main entry: ↑stealidiom … Useful english dictionary
steal somebody's heart — steal sb s ˈheart idiom (literary) to make sb fall in love with you Main entry: ↑stealidiom … Useful english dictionary
steal somebody's thunder — steal sb s ˈthunder idiom to get the attention, success, etc. that sb else was expecting, usually by saying or doing what they had intended to say or do Main entry: ↑stealidiom … Useful english dictionary
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steal — ▪ I. steal steal 1 [stiːl] verb stole PASTTENSE [stəʊl ǁ stoʊl] stolen PASTPART [ˈstəʊlən ǁ ˈstoʊ ] 1. [intransitive, transitive] to take something that belongs to someone, without their permission: steal from … Financial and business terms
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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