Make off with belongings of others.
Take away to an undisclosed location against their will and usually in order to extract a ransom.
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.
6There was a particular old Labour grandee who used to nobble me in order to give me 'sound advice'.
7She did it for Ronnie a while back when there was talk of someone trying to nobble his horses.
8Such things could well and truly nobble a band from the outset, but Edinburgh's Broken Records seem to be made of sterner stuff.
9If you don't want a mutual admiration society, which dies as soon as you've all discovered each other's faults, you must nobble the Press.
10The suspicion is that the Treasury was simply nobbled by bookies' lobbyists.
11Nobble they thought was the foulest place which they had ever seen.
12If anybody had done well at Nobble, Mr. Crinkett had done well.
13Then Downing Street briefed about how it had nobbled the foreign secretary.
14Environmental lawyer Simon Berry said DOC had been 'nobbled' by the previous government.
15More art: how litigation and forgeries are nobbling the art trade.
16She could not account for the absence of the Nobble postmark.
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