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    Snitch
    /sniCH/

    verb

    • 1. steal: "he snitched the umbrella for when he went fishing"
    • 2. inform on someone: "she wouldn't tell who snitched on me"

    noun

    • 1. an informer: "they thought he was a plant or a snitch"
  2. The meaning of SNITCH is one who snitches : tattletale. How to use snitch in a sentence.

  3. SNITCH definition: 1. to secretly tell someone in authority that someone else has done something bad, often in order…. Learn more.

  4. snitch. noun [ C ] informal disapproving us / snɪtʃ / uk / snɪtʃ /. someone who secretly tells someone in authority that someone else has done something bad, often in order to cause trouble: You little snitch! People who cooperate with police are viewed by their neighbors as snitches.

  5. Snitch is an insulting name for a person who informs the police or other authorities when others break the law or the rules. Snitch can refer to an informant who reports a crime or a tattletale who tells on someone, especially to their parents or to a teacher.

  6. To snitch is to tattle on someone, and a snitch is someone who tattles. If you snitch on your brother when he "borrows" five dollars without asking, he might call you a snitch — but, on the bright side, he'll probably have to pay you back.

  7. 1. (transitive) to steal; take, esp in an underhand way. 2. (intransitive) to act as an informer. noun. 3. an informer; telltale. 4. the nose.

  8. To act as an informer: He snitched on his comrades. v.tr. To steal (something, usually something of little value); pilfer: snitched a cookie from the counter. n. 1. An informer. 2. A thief.

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