Make off with belongings of others.
Synonyms
Examples for "lift "
Examples for "lift "
1 However, positive results from Commerzbank gave a lift to banks across Europe.
2 People in Peruvian markets say the government needs to help lift demand.
3 Analysts said that strong capital position could help to lift future dividends.
4 As soon as the lift doors open, he knows there's a problem.
5 Analysts said activity by state-linked funds was helping to lift the market.
1 As a result, he allowed the private sector off the financial hook .
2 The longer it takes systems to hook up, the slower manufacturers' sales.
3 Thought I'd ask, she says, letting me off the hook too easy.
4 Never mind: any moment now she would let him off the hook .
5 Does it merely facilitate quick and easy hook - ups or actually encourage them?
1 It was still distant, abstract : battles at sea thousands of miles off.
2 Part of the problem is that microformats are thus far very abstract .
3 Freedom -rather more complicated in the concrete than the abstract , yes?'
4 ITF's interest in Ireland's rescue services therefore is not an abstract thing.
5 The idea of vegetation in general is too abstract to be primitive.
1 A clear view in every direction, no possibility of a sneak attack.
2 If so, an American sneak attack might set off a nuclear war.
3 Police had arrested 174 people for trying to sneak across the border.
4 Knight and DeJesus would sneak food to each other, this source said.
5 He managed to sneak straight into the house without my seeing him.
1 For example, left hand to blue crimp, right foot to green pinch .
2 Union members feel the economic pinch and so they need wage increases.
3 It is not just soccer in Europe that is feeling the pinch .
4 So in some pricey places, the new limits will really pinch borrowers.
5 Curbing that enthusiasm with a pinch of realism is another matter however.
1 Other good sources of calcium include dairy products, Chinese cabbage , and sardines.
2 Spare lived on in the old hut, and worked in the cabbage - garden .
3 The steel price in China is now cheaper per tonne than cabbage .
4 Good solid bacon and cabbage medicine that is always there when needed.
5 Tip: Do try to use organic cabbage if you can find it.
1 However, the gesture-tracking platform is at least one hand - swipe closer to reality.
2 From here, simply swipe right on the location you wish to remove.
3 Better yet, they're one of the signs most likely to swipe right.
4 The trouble began when a swipe card time recording system was introduced.
5 She also took a veiled swipe at his single-payer health care plan.
1 Malvolio would walk mincingly in the sunshine there; Autolycus would filch purses.
2 But the allopaths are such mean fellows they filch all our ideas.
3 I shall perch myself there like a sacred hawk and filch her likeness.
4 If I am obliged, I would snatch them and filch them.
5 It was, indeed, an early trick of his Lordship to filch good things.
1 Greed often causes people to steal and pilfer for no good reason.
2 He was a poet, he didn't need to pilfer from others' correspondence.
3 Certain guests had a tendency to pilfer from the Pine Cone's refrigerator.
4 A rather fat soldier attempted to pilfer a horse from a dooryard.
5 Did she get rid of me so she could pilfer my closet?
1 With a little luck he hopes to nobble a few more this afternoon.
2 We were going well and if you wanted to nobble someone who would you nobble ?
3 Which means I nobble him absolutely as soon as I can, first thing in the morning.
4 Both Professor Littlewood and Mr Riley agreed that greater transparency will nobble New Zealand's growing foreign trust industry.
5 Attempts had been made to " nobble " a referee.
1 Email and networks have increased the chances for governments and companies to purloin data.
2 Somehow he'd managed to purloin a scalpel, we don't know exactly where or how.
3 The lady referred to took it upon herself to purloin the flower she wanted.
4 They need caretakers; respecterble women, that would sooner cut out their tongues than purloin .
5 She will usually attempt to purloin some trinket or other and be caught again.
1 At the very least, she wanted to snarf some overpriced, high calorie, high cholesterol food at this torturous party.
2 Ethan, were you surprised by the Snarf plan after signing on?
3 Early on, there were a lot of people who did not want Snarf to appear.
4 The method is based on flow cytometry and employs the pH-dependent fluorescent probe carboxy SNARF - 4F .
5 The Snarf one was the easiest one to buy.
6 Michael Jelenic: Our Snarf strategy actually shifted a couple of times during the course of development.
7 Spaulding: It's the same role; the old Snarf is there in the visuals and in spirit.
8 Can you walk us through your Snarf strategy?
9 Snarf came very close to getting the axe.
10 But can the pedigreed effort rehabilitate Snarf , one of the most annoying cartoon characters of all time?
11 Even Snarf makes it into the mix, although I'm not quite sure he could pass as a cat.
12 In this study, we established a robust pH i imaging system using the dual-emission ratiometric pH indicator, SNARF - 5F .
13 My take on it is that the Snarf is just an older race of cats and they evolved.
14 Those included a remote-control Humvee project, a plane-mount UHF radar, and an "x-ray apparatus" called Snarf .
15 Once Ethan came on board, the possibility of making an old school Snarf became more of a possibility.
Other examples for "snarf"
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