burglaree
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Noun
[edit]burglaree (plural burglarees)
- (rare, nonstandard) One who is burgled.
- 2004, Jennifer Cognard-Black, Narrative in the Professional Age:
- When The Critic solicited Phelps's opinion on international copyright, she said, “It seems to me there can be but two opinions on such a matter, and that they cannot be unlike those of the burglar and of the burglaree” (“An Appeal” 65).
- 2011, Lawrence Block, The Bernie Rhodenbarr Mysteries: Volume Two:
- To that the inner voice, resourceful devil that he was, had a persuasive counterargument: a burglary a few doors away, two days before I hit Mapes, would make Friday's burglary look like part of a string, and Mapes an incidental victim rather than a designated burglaree.
- 2014, Dane McCaslin, Becklaw's Murder Mystery Tour:
- What was the world coming to when a burglar blamed the burglaree for causing the break-in?
- 2017, Bill James, Close:
- They want details from the burgled, the burglaree, the burglar being unavailable, so they would know where exactly in the house resistance might come from if they matured and were on a breaking and entering sortie themselves.
Etymology 2
[edit]Noun
[edit]burglaree (countable and uncountable, plural burglarees)
- (rare, nonstandard) Alternative form of burglary
- 1879, Thomas Forder Plowman, Herne the Hunter, Or, The Days of the Bluff King Hal, page 37:
- Beware, – to touch a beadle is, at least, flat burglaree.
- 1880, Sir Arthur Sullivan, The Pirates of Penzance, page 33:
- A rollicking band of pirates we, Who, tired of tossing on the sea, Are trying their hand at a burglaree!
- 2000, Dave Freer, Eric Flint, Rats, Bats and Vats:
- "Don't worry. We're just swapping soldiery for burglaree," said Fal. "Seeing as you disapprove of us doing soldiery properly."
- 2006, Bill Neal, Getting Away with Murder on the Texas Frontier, page 3:
- A loyal son of Texas Went out upon a spree Perpetrated six murders, Some rape and burglaree.