shoplift
Appearance
See also: shop-lift
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Back-formation from shoplifter.
Pronunciation
[edit]- IPA(key): /ˈʃɒplɪft/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Noun
[edit]shoplift (plural shoplifts)
- (obsolete) A shoplifter.
- 1704, John Dunton, The Athenian Oracle, Athenian Society, Volume III, page 67,
- […] and indeed it seems a Hardſhip in our Laws, that a poor Shoplift ſhou′d be hang′d for breaking in and pilfering a few Goods, […] .
- 1704, John Dunton, The Athenian Oracle, Athenian Society, Volume III, page 67,
Verb
[edit]shoplift (third-person singular simple present shoplifts, present participle shoplifting, simple past and past participle shoplifted)
- (transitive) To steal something from a shop or store during business hours, usually by means of hiding merchandise.
- 2004 May 17, Andrew Sean Greer, The New Yorker:
- She taught Maddy to sing in Portuguese, to shoplift mascara, to play a drinking game called Spoons
- (intransitive) To steal from shops / stores during trading hours.
- 1938 April, William Peery, “Thank Rotary!”, in The Rotarian, page 52:
- Once, before we had juvenile court here, I made the mistake of putting on probation a boy who had shoplifted, a boy of good family. That boy later shot a man.
- 1969 October, Gwendolyn Midlo Hall, Mechanisms for Exploiting the Black Community, Negro Digest, 22,
- Thus, the teacher shook down the kids, the big kids shook down the little kids, the little kids shoplifted to get money, etc., etc.
- 2002 November 25, The New Yorker:
- In other words, New York is a better place to shoplift.
Synonyms
[edit]- shop steal (Australia)
Related terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]transitive: to steal something
intransitive: to steal
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See also
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- en:Crime