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Steal   /stil/   Listen
Steal

verb
(past stole; past part. stolen; pres. part. stealing)
1.
Take without the owner's consent.  "This author stole entire paragraphs from my dissertation"
2.
Move stealthily.  Synonym: slip.
3.
Steal a base.
noun
1.
An advantageous purchase.  Synonyms: bargain, buy.  "The stock was a real buy at that price"
2.
A stolen base; an instance in which a base runner advances safely during the delivery of a pitch (without the help of a hit or walk or passed ball or wild pitch).



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"Steal" Quotes from Famous Books



... Paris invested on the north, that, although accompanied by an escort of sixty horse, Castelnau was driven back into the faubourgs when making an attempt by night to proceed by one of the roads leading in this direction. He was then forced to steal down the left bank of the Seine to Poissy, before he could find means to avoid the Huguenot posts. Memoires, ...
— History of the Rise of the Huguenots - Volume 2 • Henry Baird

... They are a long time before they take liberties. So we trust them, and take them seriously, and allow intimacies which we should refuse to French boys unless formally engaged. But it is all camouflage. At heart your English young men are just flirts. They play with us, make fools of us, steal our hearts, and then go away, and often do not send so much as a post-card. Not even one little post-card to the girls who weep their hearts out for them! You English are all hypocrites. You boast that you 'play the game.' I know your ...
— Now It Can Be Told • Philip Gibbs

... memory, and some share of cunning, with the help of walking a-nights over heaths and church-yards, with this, and showing the tricks of that there dog, whom I stole from the serjeant of a marching regiment (and by the way, he can steal too upon occasion), I make shift to pick up a livelihood. My trade, indeed, is none of the honestest; yet people are not much cheated neither who give a few half-pence for a prospect of happiness, which I have heard some persons say is all a man can arrive at in this world. But I must bid you ...
— The Man of Feeling • Henry Mackenzie

... little stocking where it used to hang, and feel For one moment all the old thoughts and the old hopes o'er me steal. But, oh! loved and loving faces, in the firelight's dancing glow, There will never come another like that ...
— Poems Teachers Ask For, Book Two • Various

... possess such treasures was only matched by the generosity with which he parted with them; and his daughter well remembers the feeling of angry suspicion with which she and her brother noted the periodical arrival of a certain visitor who would be closeted with their father for hours, and steal away before the supper time, when the family would meet, with some precious parcel of books or prints under ...
— Life and Letters of Robert Browning • Mrs. Sutherland Orr


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