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81 воровать
1) General subject: cabbage, finger, gyp, liberate, mooch, mouch, nobble, pilfer, prig, purloin, steal, thieve, plunder, shoplift (steal from a shop while it's open), lift (to "lift" something is to steal it surreptitiously (with light fingers - pickpocket, shoplift etc))2) Colloquial: crib, touch for, screw out of, gaffle4) Rare: rape5) Law: strike7) Jargon: gonef, goniff, hoist, jostle, promote, snaffle, snare, sting, boost (boost a car - steal a car. Two typewriters were boosted from the shop yesterday - Shoplift), buzz, hooky, jackroll (обычно у пьяных), knock off, put the snatch on (someone or something), rip, rip off, rip-off, ripoff, snipe8) Makarov: poach -
82 loot
سَلَبَ (فِعْل) \ loot: to take goods and possessions from a place as loot: The violent crowd began looting shops and houses. plunder: to steal openly and violently, esp. in wartime. rob: to steal from (a person, building or enclosed place): He robbed me of my watch (by force, or while I slept, etc.). They robbed the bank. steal: to take secretly and unlawfully: Thieves steal things. -
83 plunder
سَلَبَ (فِعْل) \ loot: to take goods and possessions from a place as loot: The violent crowd began looting shops and houses. plunder: to steal openly and violently, esp. in wartime. rob: to steal from (a person, building or enclosed place): He robbed me of my watch (by force, or while I slept, etc.). They robbed the bank. steal: to take secretly and unlawfully: Thieves steal things. -
84 rob
سَلَبَ (فِعْل) \ loot: to take goods and possessions from a place as loot: The violent crowd began looting shops and houses. plunder: to steal openly and violently, esp. in wartime. rob: to steal from (a person, building or enclosed place): He robbed me of my watch (by force, or while I slept, etc.). They robbed the bank. steal: to take secretly and unlawfully: Thieves steal things. -
85 ladrón
adj.thieving.m.thief, burglar, robber, housebreaker.* * *► adjetivo1 thieving► nombre masculino,nombre femenino1 (persona - que roba) thief; (- que tima, engaña) crook1 (enchufe) adaptor\¡al ladrón! stop thief!————————1 (enchufe) adaptor* * *(f. - ladrona)nounthief, robber* * *ladrón, -ona1.ADJ thieving2.SM / F thief¡al ladrón! — stop thief!
ladrón/ona de guante blanco — white-collar criminal
ladrón/ona de identidades — identity thief
3.SM (Elec) adaptor* * *- drona masculino, femeninoaquí son unos ladrones — (fam) they really rip you off in here (colloq)
2) ladrón masculino (Elec) adaptor* * *= robber, thief [thieves, -pl.], burglar, crook.Ex. Some headings are vague and without scope notes to define them: robbers AND OUTLAWS; CRIME AND CRIMINALS; ROGUES AND VAGABONDS.Ex. Thieves detected by a security system seem to be largely acting on impulse, or absent-minded or trying to beat the system for sport.Ex. Most children can easily see that they need to read if they want to know what it is like to be a sportsman, a nurse, a burglar, a pilot, a patient in a hospital = La mayoría de los niños pueden ver fácilmente que necesitan leer si quieren conocer lo que significa ser deportista, enfermero, ladrón, piloto, paciente de hospital.Ex. The swindling & deception the immigrants encountered often preyed on their Zionist ideology & indeed, some of the crooks were Jewish themselves.----* argot de los ladrones = thieves' cant.* argot secreto de los ladrones = thieves' cant.* ladrón de corazones = lady-killer.* ladrón de información = info-thief.* * *- drona masculino, femeninoaquí son unos ladrones — (fam) they really rip you off in here (colloq)
2) ladrón masculino (Elec) adaptor* * *= robber, thief [thieves, -pl.], burglar, crook.Ex: Some headings are vague and without scope notes to define them: robbers AND OUTLAWS; CRIME AND CRIMINALS; ROGUES AND VAGABONDS.
Ex: Thieves detected by a security system seem to be largely acting on impulse, or absent-minded or trying to beat the system for sport.Ex: Most children can easily see that they need to read if they want to know what it is like to be a sportsman, a nurse, a burglar, a pilot, a patient in a hospital = La mayoría de los niños pueden ver fácilmente que necesitan leer si quieren conocer lo que significa ser deportista, enfermero, ladrón, piloto, paciente de hospital.Ex: The swindling & deception the immigrants encountered often preyed on their Zionist ideology & indeed, some of the crooks were Jewish themselves.* argot de los ladrones = thieves' cant.* argot secreto de los ladrones = thieves' cant.* ladrón de corazones = lady-killer.* ladrón de información = info-thief.* * *son muy ladrones en ese restaurante they're such crooks o they really rip you off in that restaurant ( colloq)masculine, feminineen esta tienda son unos ladrones ( fam); they're real crooks in this store ( colloq), they really rip you off in this store ( colloq)el que roba a un ladrón tiene cien años de perdón it's no crime to steal from a thiefpiensa el ladrón que todos son de su condición evildoers always think the worst of othersB* * *
ladrón◊ - drona sustantivo masculino, femenino
1 (de bolsos, coches) thief;
( de bancos) bank robber;
( de casas) burglar
2
ladrón,-ona
I sustantivo masculino y femenino thief, robber: ¡al ladrón!, stop thief!
II m Elec multiple socket o adaptor
La traducción más fácil y más general es thief. Robber implica alguna forma de agresividad. También existe la palabra burglar, que describe a la persona que entra en una casa con intención de robar. ➣ Ver nota en robar.
' ladrón' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
asaltante
- bandida
- bandido
- choriza
- chorizo
- descolgarse
- ladrona
- mangante
- robar
- salir
- suelta
- suelto
- ahuyentar
- caza
- coger
- introducir
- penetrar
- quitar
- ratero
- reducir
- sinvergüenza
English:
adapter
- adaptor
- arm
- blurt out
- burglar
- catch
- get
- ghoul
- hear of
- robber
- shoplifter
- thief
- throw off
- chase
- pursuit
- rustler
- shop
- suggest
* * *ladrón, -ona♦ adjthieving;en esa tienda son muy ladrones they're real crooks in that shop♦ nm,f[persona] [de coches] thief; [de bancos] robber; [de casas] burglar;ese tendero es un ladrón that shopkeeper is a crook;ladrón de guante blanco gentleman burglar o thief; Am ladrón y poli [juego infantil] cops and robbers♦ nm[para enchufes] adaptor* * *1 m EL famadapter2 m, ladrona f thief* * *ladrones : robber, thief, burglar* * *ladrón n2. (en una casa) burglar3. (en un banco) robber -
86 υποκλέπτη
ὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: pres subj mp 2nd sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: pres ind mp 2nd sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: pres subj act 3rd sg -
87 ὑποκλέπτῃ
ὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: pres subj mp 2nd sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: pres ind mp 2nd sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: pres subj act 3rd sg -
88 υποκλέψη
ὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: aor subj mid 2nd sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: aor subj act 3rd sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: fut ind mid 2nd sg -
89 ὑποκλέψῃ
ὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: aor subj mid 2nd sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: aor subj act 3rd sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: fut ind mid 2nd sg -
90 υποκλέψω
ὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: aor subj act 1st sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: fut ind act 1st sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: aor ind mid 2nd sg (homeric ionic) -
91 ὑποκλέψω
ὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: aor subj act 1st sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: fut ind act 1st sgὑποκλέπτωsteal from under: aor ind mid 2nd sg (homeric ionic) -
92 bolsear
v.1 to purse up, to pucker: applied to clothes, hangings, and other things. (Provincial)2 to pickpocket, to pick-pocket, to steal from, to thieve.3 to swipe, to pickpocket, to pick-pocket, to steal.4 to bag.* * *1.VTbolsear a algn — CAm, Méx to pick sb's pocket
2. VI* * *verbo transitivoa) (Méx fam) ( robar)b) (Chi fam) ( gorronear) to scrounge (colloq)bolsearle algo a alguien — to scrounge something off o from somebody
* * *verbo transitivoa) (Méx fam) ( robar)b) (Chi fam) ( gorronear) to scrounge (colloq)bolsearle algo a alguien — to scrounge something off o from somebody
* * *bolsear [A1 ]vt1bolsearle algo a algn to scrounge sth off o from sb* * *
bolsear ( conjugate bolsear) verbo transitivoa) (Méx fam) ( robar):
b) (Chi fam) ‹comida/cigarillos› bolsearle algo a algn to scrounge sth from o off sb
' bolsear' also found in these entries:
English:
pick
- scrounge
* * ** * * -
93 rob
- bb- ausrauben [Bank, Safe, Kasse]; berauben [Person]; abs. raubenrob somebody of something — jemandem etwas rauben od. stehlen; (deprive of what is due) jemanden um etwas bringen od. betrügen; (withhold something from) jemandem etwas vorenthalten
* * *[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!) ausrauben2) ((with of) to take (something) away from; to deprive of: An accident robbed him of his sight at the age of 21.) berauben•- academic.ru/62651/robber">robber- robbery* * *<- bb->[rɒb, AM rɑ:b]vt1. (steal from)to \rob a bank eine Bank ausrauben3. (deprive)4.▶ to \rob Peter to pay Paul ( saying) das eine Loch stopfen und ein anderes aufmachen fig (sich Geld leihen, um Schulden bezahlen zu können)* * *[rɒb]vtperson bestehlen; (more seriously) berauben; shop, bank ausrauben; orchard plündernto rob sb of sth (lit, fig) — jdn einer Sache (gen) berauben (geh), jdm etw rauben; (lit also) jdm etw stehlen
I've been robbed! — ich bin bestohlen worden!
to rob the till (Brit) —
he was robbed of the pleasure of seeing her — es war ihm nicht vergönnt, sie zu sehen
the shock robbed him of speech — er hat vor Schreck die Stimme verloren; (briefly also) der Schreck hat ihm die Sprache verschlagen
our team was robbed (inf) — das ist nicht fair(, wir hätten gewinnen müssen)
* * *A v/tb) fig etwas berauben (of gen)2. jemanden be-, ausrauben:a) jemandem etwas rauben, jemanden einer Sache berauben (beide a. fig),b) jemanden um etwas bringen, jemandem etwas nehmen;the shock robbed him of his speech der Schreck raubte ihm die Sprache;B v/i rauben, plündern* * *- bb- ausrauben [Bank, Safe, Kasse]; berauben [Person]; abs. raubenrob somebody of something — jemandem etwas rauben od. stehlen; (deprive of what is due) jemanden um etwas bringen od. betrügen; (withhold something from) jemandem etwas vorenthalten
be robbed — bestohlen werden; (by force) beraubt werden
* * *v.ausrauben v.berauben v.rauben v. -
94 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 -
95 robar a
v.to steal from, to steal away from, to nick from.Le robaron el auto a Manuel They stole the car from Manuel. -
96 ὑποκλέπτω
A steal from under,ᾠά Dionys.Av.1.11
; draw off superfluous humous,κατὰ μέρος ὑ. Alex.
Trall.12.1, cf. 1.10, Febr.5,7; ὑ. ἑαυτόν steal away from another's company, Luc.DMeretr.10.3:— [voice] Pass., to be stolen away,αἰδὼς ὑπὸ κρύφα κλέπτεται Pi.N.9.33
, cf. PFreib.11.6 (iii A. D.).II keep secret,ἕλκος Musae.85
; conceal from notice,ἐρευθιόωσαν παρειήν Id.161
; εἰ διὰ βραχύτητα τοῦ πνεύματος ὑποκλέπτοι καὶ κωλύοι τὰ λεγόμενα muffle his words, Antyll. ap. Orib.6.10.7; ὑ. ὀπωπήν take a stolen look, AP5.220 (Paul. Sil.), cf. 289 (Id.); φιλίη ὑποκλεπτομένη ib. 266 (Agath.).3 [voice] Med., disregard,τὰς παρὰ μικρὸν διαφοράς Dam.Pr.88
.Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ὑποκλέπτω
-
97 plündern
vt/i* * *to rob; to spoil; to raid; to plunder; to pillage; to maraud; to loot; to harry; to go to waste; to despoil; to ravage* * *plụ̈n|dern ['plʏndɐn]vtito loot, to plunder, to pillage; (= ausrauben) to raid; Obstbaum to strip* * *1) (to rob or steal from (a place): The soldiers looted the shops of the captured town.) loot2) raid3) (to rob or steal from (a place): The soldiers plundered and looted (the city).) plunder4) (loot, plunder: The army ransacked the conquered city.) ransack* * *plün·dern[ˈplʏndɐn]I. vt1. (ausrauben)▪ etw \plündern to plunder [or loot] sth2. (leeren)den Kühlschrank \plündern to raid the fridgeII. vi to plunder* * *intransitives, transitives Verb1) loot; plunder, pillage < town>2) (scherzh.): ([fast] leeren) raid <larder, fridge, account>; <bird, animal> strip <tree, border>* * *plündern v/t & v/i1. (Stadt) loot, plunder, pillage;es wurde gemordet und geplündert there was killing and looting* * *intransitives, transitives Verb1) loot; plunder, pillage < town>2) (scherzh.): ([fast] leeren) raid <larder, fridge, account>; <bird, animal> strip <tree, border>* * *adj.spoiled adj. v.to despoil v.to harry v.to loot v.to maraud v.to pillage v.to plunder v.to sack v.to spoil v.(§ p.,p.p.: spoiled)or p.p.: spoilt•) -
98 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 -
99 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 -
100 κλοποφορούσι
κλοποφορέωsteal from: pres part act masc /neut dat pl (attic epic doric)κλοποφορέωsteal from: pres ind act 3rd pl (attic epic doric)
См. также в других словарях:
steal from — phr verb Steal from is used with these nouns as the object: ↑site … Collocations dictionary
steal — I UK [stiːl] / US [stɪl] verb Word forms steal : present tense I/you/we/they steal he/she/it steals present participle stealing past tense stole UK [stəʊl] / US [stoʊl] past participle stolen UK [ˈstəʊlən] / US [ˈstoʊlən] *** Other ways of saying … English dictionary
steal — steal1 W3S3 [sti:l] v past tense stole [stəul US stoul] past participle stolen [ˈstəulən US ˈstou ] ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(take something)¦ 2¦(use ideas)¦ 3¦(move somewhere)¦ 4 steal the show/limelight/scene 5 steal a look/glance etc 6¦(sport)¦ 7 steal a… … Dictionary of contemporary English
steal — 1 /sti:l/ verb past tense stole, past participle stolen / stUln stoU / 1 TAKE STH (I, T) to take something that belongs to someone else (+ from): Some drug users steal from their own families to finance their habit. | steal sth: Sean has a long… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
Steal This Book — Infobox Book name = Steal This Book title orig = translator = image caption = Cover of Steal this Book author = Abbie Hoffman illustrator = cover artist = country = United States language = English series = subject = genre = publisher = Pirate… … Wikipedia
steal — v. 1) (D; tr.) ( to give surreptitiously ) to steal at (to steal a glance at smb.) 2) (D; intr., tr.) ( to take illegally ) to steal from (to steal from the rich; he stole money from his employer) 3) (d; intr.) ( to depart silently ) to steal… … Combinatory dictionary
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
steal — steal1 [ stil ] (past tense stole [ stoul ] ; past participle sto|len [ stoulən ] ) verb *** 1. ) intransitive or transitive to take something that belongs to someone else without permission: jailed for three years for stealing cars steal from:… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
steal*/*/ — [stiːl] (past tense stole [stəʊl] ; past participle stolen [ˈstəʊlən] ) verb 1) [I/T] to take something that belongs to someone else without permission She was caught stealing food from the supermarket.[/ex] 2) [I] to move somewhere quietly and… … Dictionary for writing and speaking English
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 — 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