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    Stake·out
    /ˈstākout/

    noun

    • 1. a period of secret surveillance of a building or an area by police in order to observe someone's activities: informal "they were looking for a vantage point for a stakeout"
  2. to show clearly that you claim the right to own, control, or use a particular area, for example by putting personal things there: Each gang in the city has staked out its territory and defends it from other gangs. They arrived early for the concert and staked out a place at the front of the queue.

  3. Stakeout definition: the surveillance of a location by the police, as in anticipation of a crime or the arrival of a wanted person.. See examples of STAKEOUT used in a sentence.

  4. 4 days ago · Definition of 'stake out' stake out. phrasal verb. If you stake out a position that you are stating or a claim that you are making, you are defending the boundaries or limits of the position or claim. I am trying to stake out a position between extremes. [VERB PARTICLE noun] He staked out a strong claim for the leadership of the party.

  5. Define stakeout. stakeout synonyms, stakeout pronunciation, stakeout translation, English dictionary definition of stakeout. n. Surveillance of an area, building, or person, especially by the police. American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

  6. The word comes from the stake that a surveyor uses to mark off a piece of land, and it's been around since the 1940's. Definitions of stakeout. noun. surveillance of some place or some person by the police (as in anticipation of a crime) see more. see less. type of: surveillance.

  7. noun. the surveillance of a location by the police, as in anticipation of a crime or the arrival of a wanted person. the place from which such surveillance is carried out. something that is bounded or separated by or as if by stakes, especially property, territory, or the like that one identifies or claims as one's own. See more.

  8. to state your opinion, position, etc. on something very clearly The President staked out his position on the issue. to watch a place secretly, especially for signs of illegal activity Detectives had been staking out the house for several weeks. related noun stakeout. See stake out in the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary.

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