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    stolen
    /ˈstəʊlən/
    • 1. past participle of steal

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. I don't believe "is stolen", by itself, is ever correct. The card has been stolen, is being stolen, or was stolen. This is a stolen card. (Not "this is stolen card".) The card is "stolen goods". (A special case due to the quoted phrase.) And now I'm going to idiomatically steal away. Share. Improve this answer.

  3. Mar 3, 2019 · See definition 8 in the online Merriam-Webster: : recently and illegally obtained. a : hot jewels. // admitted that the car was hot. b : wanted by the police. // also : unsafe for a fugitive. // made the town too hot for them.

  4. Apr 15, 2019 · 6. Stolen is the past participle of steal which is: to take (the property of another or others) without permission or right, especially secretly or by force. A pickpocket stole his watch. So yes, stolen is an appropriate word to use when somebody took your things without asking you. Share.

  5. Dec 16, 2016 · In some contexts it can mean "stolen" (as an abbreviation of "hijacked"): Dude! My car got jacked last night! Or as previously mentioned, as the verb meaning "to plug into an electrical outlet" (based on the noun "jack: a female fitting in an electric circuit used with a plug to make a connection with another circuit"):

  6. Jul 13, 2019 · 1. once i came across a phrase. I have had my phone stolen. and. I had had my ears removed. I understand the meaning, but what's the grammatical rule regulates it? I have googled passive voice, but found only examples like "My phone was stolen", so don't really know what to google. present-perfect. passive-voice.

  7. Robbery, on the other hand, is much more general. Being robbed means just having something you possess stolen. It can apply to all sorts of situations in which someone losses something that was or should be rightfully theirs. And almost anything, physical or intangible can be "robbed" from a person. Some phrases that include robbery:

  8. Mar 4, 2021 · I've come across this phrase only in song lyrics: Just then, somebody stole my eyes again (2017) The loneliness of loving someone can steal your eyes (2015) You stole my eyes, so you I will take (2...

  9. Oct 15, 2017 · Aside from the obvious meaning of taking someone else's property without their permission, to steal can also mean doing something surreptitiously. surreptitiously: In a way that attempts to avoid notice or attention; secretively. In this case, the couple surreptitiously escapes from their surroundings to spend time together.

  10. Mar 22, 2016 · The connotation is that I will not pass off A's comment as my own (hence the colloquial, quirky 'nicked' rather than 'stolen'), but, recognising it as a well-crafted close-vote comment, will re-use it (with proper attribution) when I feel it fits. Sadly, close-vote comments are often needed on ELU. Giving a quoted version adds a semblance of authority to the vote, and perhaps deflects some of ...

  11. We say they "dropped" the loot for you to collect. "Dropped loot" can only mean loot that has been dropped. "Loot" means a stash of money, usually money that has been stolen. "Dropped" means left behind, usually by accident. "Dropping" is a gamer euphemism for dying while carrying something.