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    snitch
    /sniCH/

    verb

    • 1. steal: "he snitched the umbrella for when he went fishing"
    • 2. inform on someone: "she wouldn't tell who snitched on me"

    noun

    • 1. an informer: "they thought he was a plant or a snitch"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. someone who secretly tells someone in authority that someone else has done something bad, often in order to cause trouble: You little snitch! People who cooperate with police are viewed by their neighbours as snitches. More examples. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  3. The meaning of SNITCH is one who snitches : tattletale. How to use snitch in a sentence.

  4. SNITCH meaning: 1. to secretly tell someone in authority that someone else has done something bad, often in order…. Learn more.

  5. The person who police call an informant or an informer is called a snitch by criminals. That’s because they don’t want to get snitched on and caught. When it’s used by kids, snitch means much the same thing as tattletale, but it’s perhaps intended to be even more insulting.

  6. To snitch is to tattle on someone, and a snitch is someone who tattles. If you snitch on your brother when he "borrows" five dollars without asking, he might call you a snitch — but, on the bright side, he'll probably have to pay you back.

  7. If you snitch something, you steal it quickly and quietly. [ informal ] I ventured into the cloakroom and surprised a classmate snitching a chocolate bar from my lunch box.

  8. snitch. (snĭch) Slang. v. snitched, snitch·ing, snitch·es. v.intr. To act as an informer: He snitched on his comrades. v.tr. To steal (something, usually something of little value); pilfer: snitched a cookie from the counter. n. 1.

  9. snitch meaning, definition, what is snitch: to tell someone in authority about somet...: Learn more.

  10. To snitch on a person means to tell someone in authority that the person has done something bad or wrong.

  11. snitch. volume_up. UK /snɪtʃ/ (informal) verb 1. (with object) steal he snitched the umbrella for when he went fishing she was snitching a look out of the window (figurative) Examples After all, these nightly visitors aren't there to snitch snapdragons or pilfer peas.North American Then the tantrums for not getting the right colour - or a ...

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