Originally posted by Sageair
I love it! referring to the dealer as stealers while we discuss how to hide the modifications we make to our trucks from them!
That is why I said:
This is the information that will rat you out if you try to defraud the dealer about performance chips removed before the trip to the stea... dealer.
stealer \Steal"er\, n. 1. One who steals; a thief.
v.
stole, (stol)
sto·len, (stolen)
steal·ing, steals
v. tr.
To take (the property of another) without right or permission.
To get or effect surreptitiously or artfully
To remove, carry, or place surreptitiously.
v. intr.
To commit theft.
To move, happen, or elapse stealthily or unobtrusively.
n.
The act of stealing.
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[Middle English stelen, from Old English stelan. ]
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stealer n.
Synonyms: steal, purloin, filch, snitch, pilfer, cop, hook, swipe, lift, pinch
These verbs mean to take another's property wrongfully, often surreptitiously. Steal is the most general: stole a car; steals research from colleagues.
To purloin is to make off with something, often in a breach of trust: purloined the money for the over priced fuel filter.
Filch and snitch often suggest that what is stolen is of little value, while pilfer sometimes connotes theft of or in small quantities: filched an extra $25 for miscellaneous shop supplies; pilfered change from the ash tray.
Cop, hook, and swipe frequently connote quick, furtive snatching or seizing: copped a part from the package before it was given to the customer, thus charging additional money for the missing part sold separately; planning to hook another $70 to change the fuel filter; swiped the extra parts from the new unit, and re-used the old ones.