SNEAK vs STEAL: NOUN
- A ball bowled so as to roll along the ground; -- called also grub.
- An informer; a tell-tale; a grass.
- , (cricket) A ball bowled so as to roll along the ground; a daisy-cutter
- A person who is regarded as underhanded and furtive and contemptible
- A mean, sneaking fellow.
- In whist, a singleton lead.
- In cricket, a ball bowled along the ground; a grub.
- A petty thief. See sneak-thief and area-sneak.
- A mean, contemptible fellow; one who has recourse to mean and cowardly methods; a person of selfish and cowardly temper and conduct.
- A person regarded as stealthy, cowardly, or underhanded.
- An instance of sneaking; a quiet, stealthy movement.
- A sneaker.
- Someone who prowls or sneaks about; usually with unlawful intentions
- Someone acting as an informer or decoy for the police
- A handle; a stale, or stele.
- In golf, a long putt which wins a hole.
- Same as stale.
- An act or a case of: theft: as, an official steal; specifically, in baseball. a stolen or furtive run from one base to another: as, a steal to third base. See steal, transitive verb, 9.
- An act of gaining possession of the ball from an opponent.
- A stolen base.
- A bargain.
- The act of stealing.
- An advantageous purchase
- A stolen base; an instance in which a base runner advances safely during the delivery of a pitch (without the help of a hit or walk or passed ball or wild pitch)
SNEAK vs STEAL: ADJECTIVE
- Marked by quiet and caution and secrecy; taking pains to avoid being observed
- Perpetrated without warning.
- Carried out in a clandestine manner.
- N/A
SNEAK vs STEAL: VERB
- Put, bring, or take in a secretive or furtive manner
- To go stealthily or furtively
- Pass on stealthily
- Make off with belongings of others
- To hide, especially in a mean or cowardly manner.
- To inform an authority about another's misdemeanours; to tell tales; to grass.
- To copy copyright-protected work without permission.
- To move silently or secretly.
- To acquire at a low price.
- To get or effect surreptitiously or artfully.
- To illegally, or without the owner's permission, take possession of something by surreptitiously taking or carrying it away.
- To go stealthily or furtively
- Move stealthily
- Steal a base
- Take without the owner's consent
- To dispossess
SNEAK vs STEAL: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To act in a stealthy and cowardly manner; to behave with meanness and servility; to crouch.
- To creep or steal (away or about) privately; to come or go meanly, as a person afraid or ashamed to be seen.
- To go or move in a quiet, stealthy way.
- To behave in a cowardly or servile manner.
- To move, give, take, or put in a quiet, stealthy manner.
- To draw attention unexpectedly in (an entertainment), especially by being the outstanding performer.
- To advance safely to (another base) during the delivery of a pitch, without the aid of a base hit, walk, passed ball, or wild pitch.
- To get or take secretly or artfully.
- To steal another's property.
- To move, happen, or elapse stealthily or unobtrusively.
- To steal a base.
- To present or use (someone else's words or ideas) as one's own.
- To take (the property of another) without right or permission.
- To withdraw, or pass privily; to slip in, along, or away, unperceived; to go or come furtively.
- To practice, or be guilty of, theft; to commit larceny or theft.
- To give or enjoy (a kiss) that is unexpected or unnoticed.
SNEAK vs STEAL: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To hide, esp. in a mean or cowardly manner.
- To march in a covert way; to gain an advantage unobserved; -- formerly followed by of, but now by on or upon, and sometimes by over; as, to steal a march upon one's political rivals.
- To accomplish in a concealed or unobserved manner; to try to carry out secretly.
- To get into one's power gradually and by imperceptible degrees; to take possession of by a gradual and imperceptible appropriation; -- with away.
- To gain by insinuating arts or covert means.
- To withdraw or convey clandestinely (reflexive); hence, to creep furtively, or to insinuate.
- To take, and carry away, feloniously; to take without right or leave, and with intent to keep wrongfully.
SNEAK vs STEAL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Someone who prowls or sneaks about
- Usually with unlawful intentions
- To hide; conceal in a furtive or cowardly manner.
- To steal; pilfer. See sneak-thief.
- To behave with meanness and servility; crouch; truckle.
- To creep or steal about privately; go furtively, as if afraid or ashamed to be seen; slink.
- In cricket, to gain (a run) and increase the score because of the slowness of the fielders: said of the batsman.
- In golf, to hole (a long, unlikely putt) so that the ball just drops into the hole.
- To take feloniously; take and carry off clandestinely, and without right or leave; appropriate to one's own uses dishonestly, or without right, permission, or authority: as applied to persons, to kidnap; abduct: as, to steal some one's purse; to steal cattle; to steal a child.
- To smuggle, literally or figuratively.
- To take or assume without right.
- To obtain surreptitiously, or by stealth or surprise: as, to steal a kiss.
- To entice or win by insidious arts or secret means.
- To perform, procure, or effect in a stealthy or underhand way; perform secretly; conceal the doing, performance, or accomplishment of.
- To move furtively and slyly: as, she stole her hand into his.
- In base-ball, to secure, as a base or run, without an error by one's opponents or a base-hit by the batter; to run successfully to, as from one base to the next, in spite of the efforts of one's opponents: as, to steal second base: sometimes used intransitively with to: as, to steal to second base.
- In netting, to take away (a mesh) by netting into two meshes of the preceding row at once.
- Synonyms To filch, pilfer, purloin, embezzle. See pillage, n.
- To practise or be guilty of theft.
- To move stealthily or secretly; creep softly; pass, approach, or withdraw surreptitiously and unperceived; go or come furtively; slip or creep along insidiously, silently, or unperceived; make insinuating approach: as, to Steal into the house at dusk; the fox stole away: sometimes used reflexively.
- To remove, withdraw, or abstract secretly or stealthily.
- (idiom) (steal (someone's) thunder) To use, appropriate, or preempt the use of another's idea, especially to one's own advantage and without consent by the originator.
SNEAK vs STEAL: RELATED WORDS
- Furtive, Swipe, Stealthy, Nobble, Surreptitious, Purloin, Snarf, Skulking, Sneaky, Filch, Lurking, Creep, Steal, Slip, Pilfer
- Shoplift, Filch, Thieve, Purloin, Grab, Snatch, Rob, Pilfer, Mouse, Pussyfoot, Creep, Bargain, Slip, Buy, Sneak
SNEAK vs STEAL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Hook, Furtive, Swipe, Stealthy, Nobble, Surreptitious, Purloin, Snarf, Skulking, Sneaky, Lurking, Creep, Steal, Slip, Pilfer
- Seize, Theft, Shoplift, Thieve, Purloin, Grab, Snatch, Pilfer, Mouse, Pussyfoot, Creep, Bargain, Slip, Buy, Sneak
SNEAK vs STEAL: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Sneak Skill: All characters and creatures in the game have their own Sneak skill ranking, which goes up as they increase in level.
- Switch into your stealth uniform and sneak closer, and then sneak even closer.
- The strikes provide Afflictions which either grant Rogue with Sneak Attacks or strengthen the Sneak Attacks.
- Sneak effectiveness is on par with vanilla, except the Blind Spot perk is added to help melee sneak characters.
- Skyrim differences in terms of the sneak skill: Pickpocket has been split into a separate skill from Sneak.
- For combat, start things off by using the aforementioned Block Runner trick to sneak up on your opponents and sneak attack them.
- To doing more sneak bonus damage scaling with sneak adding the name of an effective assassin skilled in and!
- Similar words of Synonyms for sneak into include infiltrate, penetrate, insinuate, invade, percolate, permeate, pervade, slip, sneak and wind.
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- Since I cannot steal from my neighbor, I cannot give the authority to someone else to steal from him.
- If you steal from another, you steal from yourself?
- Unfortunately, the people who are most determined to steal from you will find a way to steal from you no matter what you do.
- He that will steal a pin, will steal a better thing.
- This is done to gain your confidence, get access to your systems, steal data, steal money, or spread malware.
- As long as they are going to steal it, we want them to steal ours.
- So I used to steal money, or I would steal things from shops and sell them to friends.
- In addition, some cyber criminals can steal your data online, and may also steal your money.
- Some employees even steal from their company or steal company property of variable values.
- Realizing how I steal and let people steal my energy was initially uncomfortable.
SNEAK vs STEAL: QUESTIONS
- How to make your Vans shoes waterproof-sneak Saver?
- How to thwart pickpockets and sneak thieves in Italy?
- How to sneak an IPsec connection through a firewall?
- What makes Aegislash a good target for Shadow Sneak?
- Can sliver decks sneak in wins during a tournament?
- What does sneak attack do in Dragon Age Inquisition?
- Does offensive defense stack with sneak attack damage?
- How does covert operative affect sneak attack multipliers?
- Does the Armsman Perk affect unarmed sneak attacks?
- Does advantage negate disadvantage for sneak attack?
- Did anonymous steal military documents from North Korea?
- Why did Daniel Pelka steal sandwiches from children?
- Did YouTube users steal content from other YouTubers?
- Did AmBank steal from 1Malaysia Development Berhad?
- Did Airtasker steal intellectual property from freelancer?
- Did the starzecpyzels steal artwork from brownstone?
- Will esports steal consumers from traditional sports?
- Which browser extensions can steal your information?
- What is vertebro-basilar insufficiency (subclavian steal)?
- Did McKinsey steal AlixPartners' intellectual property?