pickpocket
Appearance
See also: pick-pocket
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈpɪkpɒkɪt/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Noun
[edit]pickpocket (plural pickpockets)
- One who steals from the pocket of a passerby, usually by sleight of hand.
- Coordinate term: putpocket
- 1874, Marcus Clarke, For the Term of his Natural Life, Penguin, published 2009, page 52:
- Old men, young men, and boys, stalwart burglars and highway robbers, slept side by side with wizened pickpockets or cunning-featured area-sneaks.
- 1970, Saul Bellow, chapter 1, in Mr. Sammler’s Planet[1], Greenwich, CT: Fawcett, published 1971, page 8:
- For several days, Mr. Sammler returning on the customary bus late afternoons from the Forty-second Street Library had been watching a pickpocket at work […] Mr. Sammler if he had not been a tall straphanger would not with his one good eye have seen these things happening.
Synonyms
[edit]Translations
[edit]one who steals from the pocket of a passerby
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Verb
[edit]pickpocket (third-person singular simple present pickpockets, present participle pickpocketing, simple past and past participle pickpocketed)
- (transitive) To pick pockets; to steal.
- 2014 November 22, Miles Brignall, “Victory against Vodafone for schoolteacher billed £15,000”, in The Guardian[2]:
- Vodafone has also dropped its claim against one of Rhys Edwards’s travelling companions – who had been at the same reunion and had his phone pickpocketed two hours later in almost identical circumstances to Rhys Edwards.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]to steal
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French
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From English pickpocket.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]pickpocket m (plural pickpockets)
- pickpocket
- Synonym: voleur à la tire
- Hypernym: voleur
Further reading
[edit]- “pickpocket”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
- “pickpocket” in Émile Littré, Dictionnaire de la langue française, 1872–1877.
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- English lemmas
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- English verbs
- English transitive verbs
- English exocentric verb-noun compounds
- en:Crime
- en:People
- French terms derived from English
- French 3-syllable words
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- French lemmas
- French nouns
- French countable nouns
- French terms spelled with K
- French masculine nouns