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  1. Mar 22, 2024 · thief. (n.) Old English þeof "one who takes property from another by stealth; a robber," from Proto-Germanic *theuba- (source also of Old Frisian thiaf, Old Saxon thiof, Middle Dutch and Dutch dief, Old High German diob, German dieb, Old Norse þiofr, Gothic þiufs), a word of uncertain origin.

    • 한국어 (Korean)

      thief 뜻: 도둑; 옛 영어에서 þeof "도둑, 강도"는 원시 게르만어의 *theuba- 에서...

    • Deutsch (German)

      thief (n.) Altenglisch þeof "Dieb, Räuber" stammt aus dem...

    • Português (Portuguese)

      No século XIII, a palavra "theft" foi emprestada do inglês...

    • Thievery

      early 13c., "acquisition or keeping of the money or personal...

    • Thicken

      c. 1500, "old or decayed tree stump" (Douglas), a provincial...

    • Thicket

      thicket. (n.) "close-set growth of shrubs, bushes, trees,...

    • Thigh

      thigh. (n.) "upper part of the leg," from above the knee to...

  2. OED's earliest evidence for thief is from 1836, in the writing of William Simms, poet, novelist, and historian. It is also recorded as a noun from the Old English period (pre-1150). thief is formed within English, by derivation.

  3. Apr 3, 2013 · But even with the written history of a word for “thief” at our disposal, we often wonder at the zigzags in its development. Russian vor “thief” (with congeners elsewhere in Slavic) is probably related to the verb vrat’ “to lie, tell falsehoods,” and the noun’s oldest recorded senses were “cheat, swindler; adulterer.”.

  4. www.oxfordreference.com › display › 10Thief - Oxford Reference

    The shortened form ‘thieves fall out’ is used to imply that an association based on shared dishonesty is likely to be disrupted. See also hang a thief when he's young, there is honour among thieves, little thieves are hanged, opportunity makes a thief. From: thief in The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable » Related content in Oxford Reference.

  5. What does the noun thief mean? There are 11 meanings listed in OED's entry for the noun thief , two of which are labelled obsolete. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence.

  6. noun [ C ] uk / θiːf / us / θiːf / plural thieves. Add to word list. B1. a person who steals: The art gallery was broken into last night, and the thieves got away with two valuable paintings. See also. theft. Fewer examples.

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  8. A thief takes the goods or property of another by stealth without the latter's knowledge: like a thief in the night. A robber trespasses upon the house, property, or person of another, and makes away with things of value, even at the cost of violence: A robber held up two women on the street.

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