Make off with belongings of others.
Sinònims
Examples for "lift"
Examples for "lift"
1However, positive results from Commerzbank gave a lift to banks across Europe.
2People in Peruvian markets say the government needs to help lift demand.
3Analysts said that strong capital position could help to lift future dividends.
4As soon as the lift doors open, he knows there's a problem.
5Analysts said activity by state-linked funds was helping to lift the market.
1As a result, he allowed the private sector off the financial hook.
2The longer it takes systems to hook up, the slower manufacturers' sales.
3Thought I'd ask, she says, letting me off the hook too easy.
4Never mind: any moment now she would let him off the hook.
5Does it merely facilitate quick and easy hook-ups or actually encourage them?
1It was still distant, abstract: battles at sea thousands of miles off.
2Part of the problem is that microformats are thus far very abstract.
3Freedom -rather more complicated in the concrete than the abstract, yes?'
4ITF's interest in Ireland's rescue services therefore is not an abstract thing.
5The idea of vegetation in general is too abstract to be primitive.
1A clear view in every direction, no possibility of a sneak attack.
2If so, an American sneak attack might set off a nuclear war.
3Police had arrested 174 people for trying to sneak across the border.
4Knight and DeJesus would sneak food to each other, this source said.
5He managed to sneak straight into the house without my seeing him.
1For example, left hand to blue crimp, right foot to green pinch.
2Union members feel the economic pinch and so they need wage increases.
3It is not just soccer in Europe that is feeling the pinch.
4So in some pricey places, the new limits will really pinch borrowers.
5Curbing that enthusiasm with a pinch of realism is another matter however.
1Other good sources of calcium include dairy products, Chinese cabbage, and sardines.
2Spare lived on in the old hut, and worked in the cabbage-garden.
3The steel price in China is now cheaper per tonne than cabbage.
4Good solid bacon and cabbage medicine that is always there when needed.
5Tip: Do try to use organic cabbage if you can find it.
1However, the gesture-tracking platform is at least one hand-swipe closer to reality.
2From here, simply swipe right on the location you wish to remove.
3Better yet, they're one of the signs most likely to swipe right.
4The trouble began when a swipe card time recording system was introduced.
5She also took a veiled swipe at his single-payer health care plan.
1Greed often causes people to steal and pilfer for no good reason.
2He was a poet, he didn't need to pilfer from others' correspondence.
3Certain guests had a tendency to pilfer from the Pine Cone's refrigerator.
4A rather fat soldier attempted to pilfer a horse from a dooryard.
5Did she get rid of me so she could pilfer my closet?
1With a little luck he hopes to nobble a few more this afternoon.
2We were going well and if you wanted to nobble someone who would you nobble?
3Which means I nobble him absolutely as soon as I can, first thing in the morning.
4Both Professor Littlewood and Mr Riley agreed that greater transparency will nobble New Zealand's growing foreign trust industry.
5Attempts had been made to "nobble" a referee.
1Email and networks have increased the chances for governments and companies to purloin data.
2Somehow he'd managed to purloin a scalpel, we don't know exactly where or how.
3The lady referred to took it upon herself to purloin the flower she wanted.
4They need caretakers; respecterble women, that would sooner cut out their tongues than purloin.
5She will usually attempt to purloin some trinket or other and be caught again.
1At the very least, she wanted to snarf some overpriced, high calorie, high cholesterol food at this torturous party.
2Ethan, were you surprised by the Snarf plan after signing on?
3Early on, there were a lot of people who did not want Snarf to appear.
4The method is based on flow cytometry and employs the pH-dependent fluorescent probe carboxy SNARF-4F.
5The Snarf one was the easiest one to buy.
1Malvolio would walk mincingly in the sunshine there; Autolycus would filch purses.
2But the allopaths are such mean fellows they filch all our ideas.
3I shall perch myself there like a sacred hawk and filch her likeness.
4If I am obliged, I would snatch them and filch them.
5It was, indeed, an early trick of his Lordship to filch good things.
6Why, asked the men in possession, should this shrivelled stranger filch our privileges?
7Progress is an honest man; the ideal and the absolute do not filch pocket-handkerchiefs.
8When she tried to filch a fry from his plate, he forked her wrist.
9I have Decker's play by me, if you can filch anything out of it.
10They filch away the earnings of the laboring classes.
11Thou hast the Roman standard filch'd away, Which they in rags of parchment did display.
12I hate usury, nor care I to earn money for others to filch from me.
13To anyone who seemed likely to filch a share of his limelight, Houdini was a tyrant.
14Lucia had already suborned Georgie to leave this note, and begin to filch the Guru away.
15It would be to filch from the city of St.-Rémi and of Clovis, of Urban II.
16Although watched sharply they contrived to filch out articles and hand them from one to another.
Filch per variant geogràfica