purloin

purloin
purloin mid-15c., "to put far away," from Anglo-Fr. purloigner "remove," from O.Fr. porloigner "put off, retard, delay," from por- (from L. pro- "forth") + O.Fr. loing "far," from L. longe, from longus (see LONG (Cf. long)). Sense of "to steal" (1540s) is a development in English. Related: Purloined; purloining.

Etymology dictionary. 2014.

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  • purloin — pur·loin /pər lȯin, pər ˌlȯin/ vt: steal Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. purloin …   Law dictionary

  • Purloin — Pur*loin , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Purloined}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Purloining}.] [OF. purloignier, porloignier, to retard, delay; pur, por, pour, for (L. pro) + loin far, far off (L. longe). See {Prolong}, and cf. {Eloign}.] To take or carry away for… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Purloin — Pur*loin , v. i. To practice theft; to steal. Titus ii. 10. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • purloin — *steal, pilfer, filch, lift, pinch, snitch, swipe, cop Analogous words: abstract, *detach: *rob, plunder, rifle, loot, burglarize …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • purloin — [v] steal appropriate, burglarize, cheat, defraud, embezzle, filch, heist, lift*, make off with*, misappropriate, pilfer, pillage, pinch*, plunder, poach, rip off*, shoplift, snitch, swindle, take, thieve; concept 139 …   New thesaurus

  • purloin — ► VERB formal or humorous ▪ steal. ORIGIN Old French purloigner put away …   English terms dictionary

  • purloin — [pər loin′, pʉr′loin΄] vt., vi. [ME purlognen < OFr purloignier < pur (L pro ), for + loin, far < L longe, LONG1] to steal; filch …   English World dictionary

  • purloin — UK [pɜː(r)ˈlɔɪn] / US [pərˈlɔɪn] verb [transitive] Word forms purloin : present tense I/you/we/they purloin he/she/it purloins present participle purloining past tense purloined past participle purloined often humorous to steal something secretly …   English dictionary

  • purloin — verb (T) formal or humorous to steal or borrow something without permission: Marek managed to purloin a copy of the house key …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • purloin — transitive verb Etymology: Middle English, to put away, misappropriate, from Anglo French purluigner to prolong, postpone, set aside, from pur forward + luin, loing at a distance, from Latin longe, from longus long more at purchase, long Date:… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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