Oiseau, avion.
1. S'envoler.
2. Planer. Voler sur la mer.
3. Se hâter. Voler au secours de quelqu'un.
4. Dérober, cambrioler.
5. Détourner. Voler quelque chose.
6. Léser. Voler quelqu'un.
To steal or take privily (commonly, that which is of little value); to pilfer.
(Irregular preterit, past participle: flew, flown).
1. To travel through the air; be airborne; SYN. wing.
2. To travel over (an area of land or sea) in an aircraft.
3. To travel in an airplane.
4. To cause to fly or float.
5. To fly a plane; SYN. aviate, pilot.
6. To transport by airplane.
7. To pass away rapidly; SYN. fell, vanish.
8. To display in the air or cause to float:.
9. To be dissipated.
10. To change quickly from one emotional state to another.
11. To hit a fly, in baseball.
12. To move quickly or suddenly.
1. To hold up something as an example; hold up one's achievements for admiration.
2. To rob at gunpoint or by means of some other threat;
3. When an object remains in good condition after heavy use, it holds up.
4. When a plan, idea, or agreement is still believed in or respected after a period of time, it has held up.
SYN. stick up.
1. To be undecided about something; SYN. vacillate.
2. To hand in the air; fly or be suspended above.
3. To move to and fro; SYN. linger.
1. To cut a nick into; SYN. chip.
2. To cut slightly, with a razor; SYN. snick.
3. To divide or reset the tail muscles, as of horses.
4. To mate successfully; of livestock.
To make off with belongings of others; SYN. cabbage, purloin, pinch, abstract, snarf, swipe, hook, sneak, filch, nobble, lift.
To steal; to filch
To take or carry away for one's self; hence, to steal; to take by theft.
1. Rob; also; cheat, defraud; steal
2. To copy or imitate blatantly or unscrupulously
3. To perform, achieve, or score quickly or easily
To take something away by force or without the consent of the owner
To carry off; steal
(Homonym: sore).
1. To fly upwards or high in the sky.
2. To go or move upward.
3. To rise rapidly, as of a current or voltage; SYN. soar up, soar upwards, surge, zoom.
(Homonym: steel).
(Irregular preterit, past participle: stole, stolen).
1. To move stealthily; SYN. slip.
2. To steal a base, in baseball.
3. To take without the owner's consent.
1. To stand erect
2. To rob, usually at gun point
3. When something long and narrow is raised above the surface, it sticks up.
1. To strike with a swiping motion.
2. To strike or wipe with a sweeping motion
3. Steal, pilfer
4. To slide (a card with a magnetic strip or bar code) through a slot in a reading device so that information stored on the strip can be processed (as in making a purchase)