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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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editor.<br />

--adv. 7 firmly, solidly: His wife was holding the ladder<br />

steady while he mended the gutter. 8 go steady. keep company,<br />

date, socialize: Is Jane still going steady with Hubert?<br />

--n. 9 boyfriend, girlfriend, (regular) fellow or girl,<br />

sweetheart, Colloq guy, gal, woman, man: Yes, Hubert is still<br />

Jane's steady. 10 regular, habitu‚, customer, frequenter,<br />

familiar face: Gil has been a steady here ever since we opened.<br />

--v. 11 stabilize, hold fast; brace, secure, support,<br />

strengthen: Prices steadied after the first hour of trading. To<br />

steady the table, merely tighten the screws holding the legs.<br />

steal v. 1 take (away), appropriate, filch, shoplift, pilfer,<br />

purloin, make or walk off or away with, get away with; embezzle,<br />

misappropriate, peculate; Colloq lift, pinch, hook, snitch,<br />

borrow, US boost, liberate, heist, hijack, Slang swipe, Brit<br />

nick, prig, US hoist: The thieves stole only the emeralds,<br />

leaving the diamonds. The bookkeeper stole the money by<br />

diverting it into his own account. 2 plagiarize, pirate, copy,<br />

imitate, appropriate, usurp, take: He claims that the story of<br />

the film was stolen from his short story. 3 sneak, creep, slip,<br />

tiptoe, prowl, lurk, skulk, Colloq pussyfoot: Silently, we<br />

stole into the garden at the rear of the house.<br />

--n. 4 bargain, (good) buy, Colloq give-away: At that price,<br />

the rug was a steal!<br />

stealing n. theft, robbery, robbing, larceny, pilferage, shoplifting,<br />

poaching, embezzlement, peculation, thievery, thieving,<br />

filching, burglary, plagiarism, plagiarizing, piracy, pirating:<br />

Stealing from the church poor-box must be one of the lowest<br />

things a person can do.<br />

stealth n. furtiveness, secrecy, clandestineness, surreptitiousness,<br />

sneakiness, slyness, underhandedness: What the thieves lacked<br />

in stealth they compensated for in knowledge of art.<br />

stealthy adj. stealthful, furtive, secretive, secret, sly, clandestine,<br />

surreptitious, sneaky, sneaking, skulking, covert, undercover,<br />

underhand(ed), backstairs, hugger-mugger, closet: He was as

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