Sneak
51sneak — to steal In standard English, to move furtively, whence, in the children s use, to inform against. In the 19th century it applied particularly to thefts from private houses: He saw Seth Thimaltwig snake hawf a pahnd o fresh butter.… …
52sneak — 1. verb 1) I sneaked out Syn: creep, slink, steal, slip, slide, sidle, tiptoe, pad 2) she sneaked a camera in Syn: smuggle, spirit, slip 2 …
53sneak — skundėjas statusas T sritis švietimas apibrėžtis Asmuo, kuris duoda skundą, kaltina kitus. Žmogus, dažnai ir nepagrįstai skundžiantis kitus, vadinamas skundiku. atitikmenys: angl. sneak vok. Kläger rus. жалобщик ryšiai: palygink – kveruliantas …
54sneak — A person who acts in a contemptible underhand manner. A furtive fellow. See area sneak …
55Sneak Previews — Title card from Sneak Previews. Also known as Opening Soon at a Theater Near You (1975 1977) Genre Film review …
56Sneak Prevue — was a pay per view preview cable barker channel in the 1990s. Sneak Prevue was a spin off of the Prevue Channel (now TV Guide Network). History Sneak Prevue premiered in 1991 as a service for promoting pay per view services, providing viewers… …
57Sneak-Preview — Sneak|pre|view, Sneak Pre|view [ sni:k( )pri:vju: ], die [engl. sneak preview, aus: sneak = inoffiziell; Überraschungs (zu: to sneak = heimlich tun, eigtl. = schleichen, ↑ Sneaker) u. preview = Voraufführung]: Preview eines Films, bei der die… …
58sneak´i|ness — sneak|y «SNEE kee», adjective, sneak|i|er, sneak|i|est. cowardly, mean, or contemptible: »They dropped their eyes and looked sneaky (Mark Twain). –sneak´i|ly, adverb …
59Sneak current — (Elec.) A current which, though too feeble to blow the usual fuse or to injure at once telegraph or telephone instruments, will in time burn them out. [Webster 1913 Suppl.] …
60Sneak-cup — n. One who sneaks from his cups; one who balks his glass. [Obs.] Shak. [1913 Webster] …