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Pilferer   Listen
Pilferer

noun
1.
A thief who steals without using violence.  Synonyms: sneak thief, snitcher.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Pilferer" Quotes from Famous Books



... the little pilferer's face and hands, took her in her lap, and tried to feel her way through the cotton wool to the ...
— Dotty Dimple's Flyaway • Sophie May

... one who pilfers early in the morning, before it is light. Evening sneak; an evening pilferer. Upright sneak: one who steals pewter pots from the alehouse boys employed to collect them. To go upon the sneak; to steal into houses whose doors are carelessly left ...
— 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue • Captain Grose et al.

... deeming him chief propagator of the Italian vice most trying to the would-be lover of the people, the want of personal self-respect. There is a solidarity in the use of soap, and every cringing beggar, idler, liar and pilferer flourished for her under the shadow of the great Francisan indifference to it. She was possibly right; at Rome, at Naples, I might have admitted she was right; but at Assisi, face to face with Giotto's vivid chronicle, we admire too much in its main subject the exquisite play of ...
— Italian Hours • Henry James

... conquers the world by good humour and ready wit? And have we not seen Pantaloons not a few, whose fate it is to get all the kicks and lose all the halfpence, to fall through all the trap doors, break their shins over all the barrows, and be forever captured by the policeman, while the true pilferer, the clown, makes his escape with the booty in his possession? Methinks I know the realities of which these things are but the shadows; have met with them in business, have sat with them at dinner. But to-night no such notions as these intrude; ...
— Dreamthorp - A Book of Essays Written in the Country • Alexander Smith

... be worthy of the greatest name in letters. The truth is that the just Vindication consists chiefly of garbled extracts from the Areopagitica of Milton. That noble discourse had been neglected by the generation to which it was addressed, had sunk into oblivion, and was at the mercy of every pilferer. The literary workmanship of Blount resembled the architectural workmanship of those barbarians who used the Coliseum and the Theatre of Pompey as quarries, who built hovels out of Ionian friezes and propped cowhouses on pillars of lazulite. Blount concluded, as Milton had done, by recommending ...
— The History of England from the Accession of James II. - Volume 4 (of 5) • Thomas Babington Macaulay

... there's been peculation of some sort, and for reasons which are as mad as the usual police tactics, the entire force is searching for you, most worthy Benjamin. The yarn goes that you're a forger in disguise, a counterfeiter of our sovereign's sacred image and all that, the pilferer of Her Majesty's mails, a dangerous criminal masquerading as ...
— The Tale of Timber Town • Alfred Grace



Words linked to "Pilferer" :   pilfer, snitcher, thief, wharf rat, sneak thief, stealer



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