单词 | sneak |
释义 | sneakn. 1. a. A sneaking, mean-spirited, paltry, or despicable person; one who acts in a shifty, shabby, or underhand manner.Jerry Sneak: see jerry-sneak n. at jerry n.1 Compounds. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > wrongdoing > sneakiness > sneaky person > [noun] snuch1579 sheep-biter?1589 sneaker1598 roundabout1605 sneaka1643 sneaks1653 creepa1876 society > morality > moral evil > lack of principle or integrity > [noun] > underhandedness or sneakiness > person snuch1579 sheep-biter?1589 sneaker1598 sneaka1643 sneaks1653 creepa1876 a1643 W. Cartwright Ordinary (1651) iv. v. 75 I'l suffer no such sneaks As you, t'offend this way. 1677 W. Hughes Man of Sin ii. x. 159 The Devil,..being baffled, packs away, like a silly Sneak as he was. b. One who robs or steals in a sneaking manner, or who enters places clandestinely for that purpose. (See also area sneak n. at area n. Compounds 2.) ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > thief > [noun] > who works by stealth thief688 hole-creeper1462 stalker?a1513 sneak1785 creep1914 snooper1924 1785 F. Grose Classical Dict. Vulgar Tongue Sneak, a pilferer. 1839 H. Brandon Dict. Flash or Cant Lang. in W. A. Miles Poverty, Mendicity & Crime 165/2 Sneaks, boys who creep into houses, down areas, or into shops, etc. to enter the premises. 1902 Westm. Gaz. 30 June 2/3 The genuine poacher—the real article we mean, not the commercial midnight game sneak. 2. Cant. a. The act or practice of stealing in unperceived in order to rob; a robbery effected in this manner. Usually in upon the sneak. Also more generally on the sneak, on the sly, by stealth, under concealment. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > [noun] > in sneaking manner manticulation1623 sneak1699 hole-creeping1852 creep1928 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > stealthy action, stealth > stealthy movement > [noun] stalkingc1000 creeping1565 hedge-creeping1579 stealing1581 steal1590 stealth1600 insinuation1608 slinking1611 sneakinga1657 prowl1803 creep1818 sneak1819 lurk1829 slink1853 pussyfooting1956 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > stealthy action, stealth > [adverb] softlyc1225 by stalea1240 privilya1250 slylyc1275 thieflyc1290 stealingly13.. by stealth1390 stalworthlya1400 theftfullyc1400 theftlyc1400 theftuouslyc1400 under veilc1425 thievishly?c1450 by theft1488 quietly1488 furtively1490 by surreption1526 hugger-muggera1529 in hugger-mugger1529 underhand1538 insidiously1545 creepingly1548 surreptiously1573 underboard1582 filchingly1583 sneakingly1598 underwater1600 slipperily1603 thief-likea1625 clandestinely1632 surreptitiously1643 thievously1658 clancularly1699 stownlins1786 stealthily1806 underhandedly1806 stolen-wise1813 on (upon, under, or by) the sly1818 round-the-corner1820 underhanded1823 stealthfully1828 slinkingly1830 slippingly1830 on the sneak?1863 sneakishly1867 behind backs1874 stalkingly1891 on the side1893 under the counter1926 underground1935 under the table1938 down and dirty1959 sneakily1966 1699 B. E. New Dict. Canting Crew at Ken-miller 'Tis a bob Ken, Brush upon the Sneak, 'tis a good House, go in if you will but Tread softly. 1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. at Gammon A thief detected in a house which he has entered, upon the sneak, for the purpose of robbing it. 1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. at Gammon Morning-sneak, going out early to rob private houses or shops by slipping in at the door unperceived [etc.]. ?1863 T. Taylor Ticket-of-leave Man i. 9 Pottering about on the sneak, flimping or smashing a little when I get the chance. 1930 Amer. Mercury XXI. 458/1 You got to work strictly on the sneak. All the spots are hot. 1935 Sun (Baltimore) 13 July 9/6 A few of them [sc. betting spots] were ‘sneaking’ with just as many customers as ever... These spots ‘on the sneak’ usually are located in the upper floors of Loop skyscrapers. 1955 Publ. Amer. Dial. Soc. No. 24. 86 If the road mob decides to work on the sneak, that is, without advance arrangements in any locality, [etc.]. 1982 Chicago Sun-Times 6 Aug. 71/1 He does so with all the glee of a schoolkid reading Playboy magazine on the sneak. b. The act of stealing away or running off in a sneaking manner. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > safety > escape > [noun] > stealthy moonlight flitting1721 mizzle1789 sneak1819 moonlight flit1824 guy1889 moonlight1958 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > [noun] > going away suddenly or hurriedly > secretly or absconding absconding1676 elopementa1763 flight1769 levanting1788 sneak1819 absconsion1827 skip1942 1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. (at cited word) One or more prisoners having escaped..by stealth, without..alarming their keepers, are said to have..given it to 'em upon the sneak. 1901 Wide World Mag. 6 478/1 Geronimo and his blood~thirsty cut-throats had ‘made a sneak’, that is, left their reservation and were on the war-path. 3. Cricket. A ball bowled so as to roll along the ground; a daisy-cutter. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > cricket > bowling > [noun] > a ball bowled > types of delivery or ball full toss1826 long hop1830 twister1832 bail ball1833 bailer1833 grubber1837 slow ball1838 wide1838 ground ball1839 shooter1843 slower ball1846 twiddler1847 creeper1848 lob1851 sneak1851 sneaker1851 slow1854 bumper1855 teaser1856 daisy-cutter1857 popper1857 yorker1861 sharpshooter1863 headball1866 screwball1866 underhand1866 skimmerc1868 grub1870 ramrod1870 raymonder1870 round-armer1871 grass cutter1876 short pitch1877 leg break1878 lob ball1880 off-break1883 donkey-drop1888 tice1888 fast break1889 leg-breaker1892 kicker1894 spinner1895 wrong 'un1897 googly1903 fizzer1904 dolly1906 short ball1911 wrong 'un1911 bosie1912 bouncer1913 flyer1913 percher1913 finger-spinner1920 inswinger1920 outswinger1920 swinger1920 off-spinner1924 away swinger1925 Chinaman1929 overspinner1930 tweaker1938 riser1944 leg-cutter1949 seamer1952 leggy1954 off-cutter1955 squatter1955 flipper1959 lifter1959 cutter1960 beamer1961 loosener1962 doosra1999 1851 J. Pycroft Cricket Field vii. 105 Cowley..put on one Tailor Humphreys to bowl twisting underhand sneaks. 1862 J. Pycroft Cricket Tutor 52 Sneaks jump about and twist with the ground. 1886 J. Pycroft Oxf. Memories II. 93 Once, when good bowling was unsuccessful, they put in Tailor Humphreys to bowl twisting sneaks. 1899 A. Lubbock Mem. Eton xviii. 278 A long hop to leg would have been a more suitable ball than a straight sneak. 4. slang. A soft-soled, noiseless slipper or shoe. ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > footwear > shoe or boot > shoe > [noun] > types of > with specific types of sole > soft sole sneak1862 sneaker1895 1862 Female Life in Prison I. xvii. 211 The night~officer is generally accustomed to wear a species of India~rubber shoes or goloshes on her feet. These are termed ‘sneaks’ by the women [of Brixton Prison]. 1883 J. Greenwood In Strange Company (ed. 2) 321 ‘Sneaks’..are shoes with canvas tops and indiarubber soles. 1904 A. Griffiths Fifty Years Public Service xiv. 204 His footsteps were..deadened by the ‘sneaks’, or cloth slippers, worn to conceal his whereabouts. 5. U.S. colloquial = sneak preview n. at sneak- comb. form 1. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > cinematography > film show > [noun] > preview trade show1913 roadshowing1923 press show1928 sneak preview1938 sneak1941 1941 B. Schulberg What makes Sammy Run? iv. 60 We'll know better after the sneak... And..when we see whether Mr. and Mrs. Public buy tickets. 1967 Boston Globe 5 Apr. 57/1 (heading) Sneaks slated at music hall. 1978 E. Tidyman Table Stakes ii. vi. 265 The studio agreed to give the production three previews... The first ‘sneak’..took place at a small theater in Redlands. Draft additions 1993 c. colloquial. A tell-tale, an informer. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > informing on or against > [noun] > informer wrayerc1000 wrobberc1300 discoverera1400 denunciator1474 informer1503 denouncer1533 detector1541 delatora1572 sycophant1579 inquisitor1580 scout1585 finger man1596 emphanista1631 quadruplator1632 informant1645 eastee-man1681 whiddler1699 runner1724 stag1725 snitch1785 qui tam1788 squeak1795 split1819 clype1825 telegraph1825 snitcher1827 Jack Nasty1837 pigeon1847 booker1863 squealer1865 pig1874 rounder1884 sneak1886 mouse1890 finger1899 fizgig1902 screamer1902 squeaker1903 canary1912 shopper1924 narker1932 snurge1933 cheese eater1935 singer1935 tip-off1941 top-off1941 tout1959 rat fink1961 whistle-blower1970 1886 H. Baumann Londinismen p. v Are smashers and divers And noble contrivers Not sold to the beaks By the coppers an' sneaks? 1915 W. S. Maugham Of Human Bondage xxi. 86 ‘It would serve you right if I told him,’ said Mr. Carey. ‘If you like to be a perfect sneak you can.’ 1934 Ld. Berners First Childhood iii. 33 She was a spoil-sport and a sneak. 1959 I. Opie & P. Opie Lore & Lang. Schoolchildren x. 189 One who blabs to a teacher or to a senior is a..‘rotten sneak’. 1989 Independent 11 Feb. (Mag.) 22/1 It started with a tip-off... The Sun was told by one of its regular sneaks, paid on a story-by-story basis that [etc.]. Draft additions 1993 b. A stealthy movement; a sneaking departure or expedition. quarterback sneak: see quarterback sneak n. at quarterback n. Compounds. slang (chiefly U.S.). ΚΠ 1904 ‘O. Henry’ Cabbages & Kings xvii. 303 Well, we three made a sneak around the edge of town so as not to be seen. 1930 Liberty 11 Oct. 30/3 Rube copped a sneak on the joint to find out if it was ready. In twenty minutes he gives us the O.K. 1936 P. G. Wodehouse Laughing Gas iv. 51 She had said something about her chances of doing a quiet sneak to bed at a fairly early hour. Draft additions September 2013 6. American Football. = quarterback sneak n. at quarterback n. Compounds. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > American football > [noun] > actions or manoeuvres rush1857 punt-out1861 goal-kicking1871 safety1879 safety touchdown1879 scrimmage1880 rushing1882 safety touch1884 touchback1884 forward pass1890 run1890 blocking1891 signal1891 fake1893 onside kick1895 tandem-play1895 pass play1896 spiral1896 shift1901 end run1902 straight-arm1903 quarterback sneak1904 runback1905 roughing1906 Minnesota shift1910 quarterbacking1910 snap-back1910 pickoff1912 punt return1914 screen forward pass1915 screen pass1920 power play1921 sneak1921 passback1922 snap1922 defence1923 reverse1924 carry1927 lateral1927 stiff-arm1927 zone1927 zone defence1927 submarine charge1928 squib1929 block1931 pass rushing1933 safetying1933 trap play1933 end-around1934 straight-arming1934 trap1935 mousetrap1936 buttonhook1938 blitzing1940 hand-off1940 pitchout1946 slant1947 strike1947 draw play1948 shovel pass1948 bootleg1949 option1950 red dog1950 red-dogging1951 rollout1951 submarine1952 sleeper pass1954 draw1956 bomb1960 swing pass1960 pass rush1962 blitz1963 spearing1964 onsides kick1965 takeaway1967 quarterback sack1968 smash-mouth1968 veer1968 turn-over1969 bump-and-run1970 scramble1971 sack1972 nose tackle1975 nickel1979 pressure1981 1921 Lima (Ohio) News & Times-Democrat 13 Nov. 12/3 Winegardner 2 yards on a sneak. 1986 Quarterback 17 May 4/1 All the Colts points were scored by quarterback Dean Isaacs... The second, coming in the third quarter was a 10-yard sneak. 1997 N.Y. Times 7 Sept. i. 22/5 After two sneaks set up third-and-goal from the 1, a sack pushed the Indians back. 2004 N. Allen More Tales from Hog Heaven i. 16 The 76-yard sneak brought Eichler recognition from Arkansas clear back to the Big Apple. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online June 2022). sneakv. I. intransitive. 1. To move, go, walk, etc., in a stealthy or slinking manner; to creep or steal furtively, as if ashamed or afraid to be seen; to slink, skulk: a. With adverbs, as away, down, in, off, out, etc. ΘΚΠ the mind > goodness and badness > wrongdoing > sneakiness > [verb (intransitive)] sneak1598 the world > movement > progressive motion > specific manner of progressive motion > move progressively in specific manner [verb (intransitive)] > softly or stealthily creepc1175 skulk?c1225 stealc1374 slipc1400 sneak1598 crawl1623 snake1848 slime1898 oil1925 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > stealthy action, stealth > stealthy movement > move stealthily [verb (intransitive)] besteala725 snikec897 steal1154 creepc1175 skulk?c1225 snaker?c1225 stalkc1300 slenchc1330 lurka1375 slinkc1374 snokec1380 slide1382 slipc1400 mitchera1575 sneak1598 snake1818 sly1825 snoop1832 to steal one's way1847 sniggle1881 gumshoe1897 slime1898 pussyfoot1902 soft-foot1913 cat-foot1916 pussy1919 pussa1953 1598 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1 iv. iii. 60 A poore vnminded outlaw sneaking home. View more context for this quotation 1630 T. Dekker Second Pt. Honest Whore iii. ii. 148 I hope he will not sneake away with all the money. 1631 B. Jonson Staple of Newes ii. iv. 124 in Wks. II Where's Madrigall? Is he sneek'd hence. 1709 R. Steele Tatler No. 9. ⁋3 Miss having heard enough, sneaks off for Fear of Discovery. 1740 S. Richardson Pamela I. xix. 47 [The cook] was hot with her Work; and I sneak'd away. 1844 C. Dickens Martin Chuzzlewit xlvii. 544 To avoid people, and sneak on unobserved. 1877 W. Black Green Pastures & Piccadilly I. i. 5 The two women were sneaking off by themselves. 1887 Lantern (New Orleans) 17 Dec. 3/3 He grubbed ten dollars from de bums an den snuck home. 1932 J. T. Farrell Young Lonigan ii. 55 They had all snuck in and were having a good time, making trouble. 1969 Oz May 3/1 It was sticking out of a dustbin—the mag I mean..so I snuck off to the park and had a good old read. 1976 S. Brett So Much Blood xvi. 191 At the interval Charles and Frances snuck out to the pub. 1979 Vassar Q. Summer 17/3 I have come around the back way and snuck up, as we say in Nebraska, on my subject. b. With prepositions, as about, after, from, into, etc. ΚΠ 1607 F. Beaumont Woman Hater v. iii. sig. K1 There are they still poore rogues,..sneaking after cheeses. 1609 S. Rowlands Dr. Merrie-man (Hunterian Club) 20 The Rusticke..softly sneaking out of doores, About his message goes. a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry V (1623) i. ii. 171 To her vnguarded Nest, the Weazell (Scot) Comes sneaking . View more context for this quotation 1714 A. Pope Corr. 25 Sept. (1956) I. 255 I have..sneaked along the walks, with that astonished and diffident air. 1749 T. Smollett tr. A. R. Le Sage Gil Blas I. i. xiii. 66 But I made no reply, and very wisely condescended to sneak into the straw. 1825 T. Hook Sayings & Doings 2nd Ser. II. 51 They..sneaked from my door with every mark of..servile cowardice. 1835 J. Ross Narr. Second Voy. North-west Passage ii. 22 Appearing disorderly and dirty, as they..sneaked about the ship. 1879 E. K. Bates Egyptian Bonds II. viii. 191 Like truant schoolboys who sneak into the busy schoolroom. 1940 R. Chandler Farewell, my Lovely vi. 36 I snuck in there and grabbed it. 1957 J. Kerouac On the Road ii. viii. 159 Four sullen fieldworkers, snuck from their chores to brawl in drinking fields. c. Without const. (Frequently used to denote want of courage, independence, or straightforwardness, without reference to place or movement.) ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > stealthy action, stealth > be stealthy [verb (intransitive)] sneak1633 society > morality > moral evil > lack of principle or integrity > be unprincipled [verb (intransitive)] > be sneaky or underhand sneak1633 the mind > emotion > fear > cowardice or pusillanimity > be cowardly or show signs of cowardice [verb (intransitive)] > (of cowardice) sneak sneak1765 1665 R. Boyle Occas. Refl. vi. v. sig. Nn8 As these Russians could not take a better way than that of not sneaking, to avoid the having their Rites and Persons undervalu'd. 1682 N. O. tr. N. Boileau-Despréaux Lutrin ii. 184 For he..scorn'd to stand, and sneak with hands in Pocket. 1699 R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris (new ed.) 266 He sneak'd like a Cock, that hangs down his wings when he's beaten. 1734 A. Pope Epist. to Visct. Cobham 6 Tom struts a Soldier,..Will sneaks a Scriv'ner, an exceeding Knave. 1781 S. Johnson Pope in Pref. Wks. Eng. Poets VII. 140 Pope was reduced to sneak and shuffle, sometimes to deny, and sometimes to apologise. 1845 Nonconformist V. 133 Law..may allow..them to sneak—but law cannot wipe away the reproach of sneaking. 1861 ‘G. Eliot’ Silas Marner ix. 144 If you know where he's sneaking..you may tell him to spare himself the journey o' coming back home. d. U.S. colloquial. To make off quietly. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away [verb (intransitive)] > go away quietly or stealthily steal1154 to steal one's wayc1385 skew?a1400 astealc1400 fleetc1400 slip?c1450 shrink1530 flinch1563 shift1594 foist1603 shab1699 slope1851 smuggle1865 sneak1896 mope1914 to oil out1945 the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going away > go away [verb (intransitive)] > go away suddenly or hastily > secretly or abscond to run awayOE elope1596 to step aside1620 abscond1652 shirk1681 decamp1751 levant1797 absconce1823 skip1865 skin1871 to shoot the crow1887 sneak1896 to go through1933 to take a run-out powder1933 1896 G. Ade Artie 7 I'd a' sneaked early in the game. 1901 Scribner's Mag. Apr. 409/1 When you get over the fence,..yell fire till the crowd comes, then sneak. 2. To cringe or be servile to (a person, etc.). ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > humility > servility > be servile to [verb (transitive)] fawna1568 comply1641 sneak1665 spaniel1812 yessir1898 yes1915 ass-kiss1951 cocksuck1954 ass-lick1962 crawl1966 1665 R. South Serm. preached before Court 34 I need salute no great Mans Threshold, sneak to none of his Friends or Servants. a1704 T. Brown Dialogue Oxf. Schollars in Wks. (1707) I. i. 12 Pitiful Curates or Chaplains that must sneak to the Groom and Butler. 1796 E. Burke Let. Dec. in Corr. (1970) IX. 163 We sneak to the Regicides, but we boldly trample on our poor fellow Citizens. 1873 R. Browning Red Cotton Night-cap Country iv. 257 Why else to me..Sneak, cap in hand, now bribe me to forsake My maimed Léonce, now bully, cap on head. 3. School slang. To peach, inform, tell tales. ΘΚΠ society > communication > information > informing on or against > inform on or against [verb (intransitive)] inform1588 peach1598 whistle1599 sing1612 whiddlec1661 squeak1690 wheedle1710 whittle1735 to blow the gab1785 snitch1801 rat1810 nose1811 sing1816 gnarl1819 split1819 stag1839 clype1843 squeal1846 blow1848 to round on1857 nark1859 pimp1865 squawk1872 ruck1884 to come or turn copper1891 copper1897 sneak1897 cough1901 stool1911 tattle-tale1918 snout1923 talk1924 fink1925 scream1925 sarbut1928 grass1929 to turn over1967 dime1970 1897 Daily News 3 June 7/2 Sneaking, in the ethics of public school boys, is the unpardonable sin. 1902 Spectator July 46/2 The boys..usually prefer to suffer rather than ‘sneak’ of one of their companions. II. transitive. 4. a. To turn or draw aside, to put or thrust in or into, to move or slide to, etc., in a stealthy manner. ΘΚΠ the world > movement > motion in a certain direction > going or coming in > go or come in [verb (intransitive)] > surreptitiously or subtly to steal (some one or something) ina1555 shuffle1565 slink1567 to come in at (also by) the window1590 insinuate1600 wimble1605 screw1614 sneak1680 oil1925 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > stealthy action, stealth > stealthy movement > withdraw, steal away [verb (reflexive)] stealc1386 wile?a1400 diskenc1460 convey1535 sneak1680 the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > stealthy action, stealth > stealthy movement > traverse stealthily [verb (transitive)] > convey sneak1680 1684 T. Otway Atheist iii. 22 Sneak what Ready-money thou hast into my Hand. 1702 C. Beaumont J. Beaumont's Psyche (new ed.) i. xlvii. 4 Stout Trees..From this dire Breath sneak'd their faint heads aside. 1754 Connoisseur No. 32. ⁋3 I see a man every minute stealing out a dirty muckender, then sneaking it in again. 1889 Macmillan's Mag. Aug. 253/1 I lay stirless, softly sneaking my right hand to the pistol. 1892 A. C. Gunter Miss Dividends (1893) 275 When Lawrence's name comes up for membership, he sneaks in a black-ball, as many another prig..has done before. 1968 J. M. Ullman Lady on Fire (1969) xii. 160 You've got a new lead. Maybe something the sister told you after you snuck her out of that hotel. 1971 D. E. Westlake I gave at Office (1972) 12 There was some suspicion that a couple of guests had snuck friends in. 1979 R. Jaffe Class Reunion i. vii. 69 He wanted to sneak her into his room. b. To keep out of sight; to hide. rare. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > hiding, concealing from view > hide, conceal [verb (transitive)] heeleOE forhelec888 i-hedec888 dernc893 hidec897 wryOE behelec1000 behidec1000 bewryc1000 forhidec1000 overheleOE hilla1250 fealc1325 cover1340 forcover1382 blinda1400 hulsterc1400 overclosec1400 concealc1425 shroud1426 blend1430 close1430 shadow1436 obumber?1440 mufflea1450 alaynec1450 mew?c1450 purloin1461 to keep close?1471 oversilec1478 bewrap1481 supprime1490 occulta1500 silec1500 smoor1513 shadec1530 skleir1532 oppressa1538 hudder-mudder1544 pretex1548 lap?c1550 absconce1570 to steek away1575 couch1577 recondite1578 huddle1581 mew1581 enshrine1582 enshroud1582 mask1582 veil1582 abscondc1586 smotherc1592 blot1593 sheathe1594 immask1595 secret1595 bemist1598 palliate1598 hoodwinka1600 overmaska1600 hugger1600 obscure1600 upwrap1600 undisclose1601 disguise1605 screen1611 underfold1612 huke1613 eclipsea1616 encavea1616 ensconcea1616 obscurify1622 cloud1623 inmewa1625 beclouda1631 pretext1634 covert1647 sconce1652 tapisa1660 shun1661 sneak1701 overlay1719 secrete1741 blank1764 submerge1796 slur1813 wrap1817 buttress1820 stifle1820 disidentify1845 to stick away1900 1701 W. Wake Ration. Texts Script. (Todd) 222 Some sins dare the world in open defiance, yet this [sc. slander] lurks, and sneaks its head. c. To pass through in an underhand or stealthy manner. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > stealthy action, stealth > stealthy movement > traverse stealthily [verb (transitive)] prowla1586 sneak1891 1891 Daily News 29 Jan. 2/4 Mr. Stephens..objected.. to this cruel and unjust Bill being ‘sneaked’ through Parliament. 1896 Voice (N.Y.) 5 Mar. 2/4 A most important measure is being sneaked through the general assembly. ΘΚΠ the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > secrecy, concealment > stealthy action, stealth > accomplish clandestinely [verb (transitive)] steal1625 sneaka1657 the mind > emotion > fear > cowardice or pusillanimity > be cowardly [verb (transitive)] > act in sneaking manner sneaka1657 a1657 G. Daniel Trinarchodia: Henry V ccxcii, in Poems (1878) IV. 174 Something hidden lifts the Thought To Noble Actions, when they heare 'em told, And Hee who Sneaks his part, will praise 'em bold. 6. a. Cant. (See quot. 18192.) ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > safety > escape > escape from [verb (transitive)] > contrive to escape or evade > a person or slip away from aglya1250 outsteala1325 glide?1510 slip1513 betrumpa1522 to give (one) the slip1567 to get by ——1601 outslip1616 to give (a person or thing) the go-by1653 elude1667 to tip (a person) the picks1673 bilk1679 to tip (a person) the pikes1688 to give one the drop1709 jouk1812 double1819 sneak1819 shirk1837 duck1896 the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > steal [verb (transitive)] > steal from > steal from sneakingly sneak1819 creep1914 1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. (at cited word) To sneak a place is to rob it upon the sneak. 1819 J. H. Vaux New Vocab. Flash Lang. in Memoirs II. (at cited word) One or more persons having escaped from their confinement by stealth, without..alarming their keepers, are said to have sneak'd 'em. b. colloquial. To steal in a sneaking or stealthy manner; to filch; to take or partake of surreptitiously. ΘΚΠ the mind > possession > taking > taking surreptitiously > take surreptitiously [verb (transitive)] forsteala940 stealc950 undernimc1175 to run away with?c1430 embezzle1469 steal?1473 surrept1548 cloyne1549 abstract1555 secrete1749 smuggle1768 to run off1821 snakea1861 sneak1883 snitch1904 palm1941 the mind > possession > taking > stealing or theft > steal [verb (transitive)] > steal sneakingly snakea1861 sneak1883 swike1889 1883 Daily News 14 Sept. 3/7 The various kinds of people who visit public libraries for other than legitimate purposes, such as..those who sneaked umbrellas, and those who stole books. 1889 J. K. Jerome Three Men in Boat ix. 142 Somebody must have sneaked it, and run off with it. 1900 Dial. Notes 2 61 Sneak, to appropriate. 1921 E. O'Neill Emperor Jones i. 160 When I sleeps, dey sneaks a sleep, too, and I pretends I never suspicions it. a1953 E. O'Neill More Stately Mansions (1964) ii. iii. 136 Each sneaks a suspicious, probing glance at the other. 1955 J. H. O'Hara Ten North Frederick (1956) 34 I can sneak us another drink. 1956 M. Duggan Immanuel's Land 107 The conductor stood on the bucking platform, sneaking a cigarette. 1968 Globe & Mail (Toronto) 17 Feb. 6/2 If they did have these smoking areas..the students wouldn't have to sneak a smoke in the washroom. 1978 J. Irving World according to Garp ii. 30 He was happy to run errands for the patients, deliver messages, sneak food. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1912; most recently modified version published online June 2022). > see alsoalso refers to : sneak-comb. form < n.a1643v.1598 see also |
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