different between theftable vs thieve
theftable
English
Etymology
First recorded use in the plays of Webster circa 1580; especially apropos the virtue of a Lady: "her very soul and that other tenderness is there and theftable for any knave."
Adjective
theftable (not comparable)
- (obsolete, humorous) able to be stolen
Related terms
- thief
- thieve
theftable From the web:
thieve
English
Etymology
From Middle English *theven (found in Middle English thevinge (“thieving”)), from Old English þ?ofian, ?eþ?ofian, ?eþ?efian (“to thieve, steal”).
Pronunciation
- enPR: th?v, IPA(key): /?i?v/
- Rhymes: -i?v
Verb
thieve (third-person singular simple present thieves, present participle thieving, simple past and past participle thieved)
- (intransitive) To commit theft.
Synonyms
- steal
- rob
Related terms
- theft
- thief
- thievery
- thieving
- theftable
- thieve out
Translations
thieve From the web:
- what thieves means
- what thieves do with stolen cars
- what thieves do with stolen iphones
- what thieves guild jobs are in markarth
- what thieves do
- what thieves do with stolen phones
- what's thieves oil
- what thieves do with stolen laptops
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