1 / 5
Steal Sydney Sweeney'S Look: The Perfect Great Jeans For Fall - n7el2k5
2 / 5
Steal Sydney Sweeney'S Look: The Perfect Great Jeans For Fall - 2pn9hkj
3 / 5
Steal Sydney Sweeney'S Look: The Perfect Great Jeans For Fall - 50uy2b7
4 / 5
Steal Sydney Sweeney'S Look: The Perfect Great Jeans For Fall - fovlj8j
5 / 5
Steal Sydney Sweeney'S Look: The Perfect Great Jeans For Fall - ou0ej2h


To take something without the permission or knowledge of the owner and keep it: Purloined the key to his cousins safe-deposit box. He was accused of stealing a small boys bicycle. But a bargain thats so good its almost like youre getting away with robbery is also called a steal. To purloin is to make off with something, often in a breach of trust: Steal may apply to any surreptitious taking of something and differs from the other terms by commonly applying to intangibles as well as material things. To take (the property of another or others) without permission or right, especially secretly or by force. If you steal something from someone, you take it away from them without their permission and without intending to return it. Steal , pilfer, filch, purloin mean to take from another without right or without detection. Steal is the most general: See examples of steal used in a sentence. · steal (third-person singular simple present steals , present participle stealing, simple past stole, past participle stolen or (nonstandard, colloquial) stole) (transitive) to take illegally, or without the owner s permission, something owned by someone else without intending to return it. Steals research from colleagues. To steal is take something that isnt yours: [verb noun] bridge stole the money from clients accounts. [verb noun + from] sometimes she had to steal to eat. To secretly take something that does not belong to you, without intending to return it: