snitcher / snɪtʃ /

狙击手鼻涕虫鼻烟壶鼻炎患者

snitcher 的定义

v. 有主动词 verb

Informal.

  1. to snatch or steal; pilfer.

snitcher 近义词

n. 名词 noun

informer

更多snitcher例句

  1. I don’t want anybody to come and snitch to me unless it’s a safety issue or serious work-related issue I need to know about.
  2. A snitch captures the moment on his cellphone, and Ali lands in jail.
  3. They could follow what’s known as the “blue wall of silence,” essentially a code between officers that they won’t snitch on each other or otherwise try to get each other in trouble.
  4. “We see it as a snitch society program,” said Rafael Bautista, the lead organizer with San Diego Tenants United.
  5. Since one of the individuals first started speaking with attorneys in the case, staff began calling him “rat,” “snitch” and routinely refusing to release him for his medications in a timely manner, the documents contend.
  6. Too moderate and the more radical groups call you a snitch, jeopardizing your standing and authority at demonstrations.
  7. The Prosecutor and the Snitch By Maurice Possley - The Marsall Project Did Texas execute an innocent man?
  8. To Connolly and Morris, Bulger was a TE, or top-echelon informant, the highest designation in the Bureau for a snitch.
  9. "A lot of Mexican dudes got family in Mexico, where the cartels can get at them, so they can't snitch," the prisoner says.
  10. If your main source is court docs and snitch statements, you have to understand most of that is not very credible.
  11. Will you promise not to snitch if I tell you how to stop it, even if you don't go there yourself?
  12. If anybody tries to stop us or to snitch you free you'll get the acid in those shining peepers without being able to move.
  13. Pinkie and this double-crossing snitch went there—and only found a note from the White Moll.
  14. They've put th' reward out, and three times since last night some of me own pals 've tried to snitch on me.
  15. Snitch, to give information to the police, to turn approver.