snitching 的定义
Informal.
- to snatch or steal; pilfer.
snitching 近义词
informer
steal
inform
更多snitching例句
- 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.
- A snitch captures the moment on his cellphone, and Ali lands in jail.
- 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.
- “We see it as a snitch society program,” said Rafael Bautista, the lead organizer with San Diego Tenants United.
- 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.
- Too moderate and the more radical groups call you a snitch, jeopardizing your standing and authority at demonstrations.
- The Prosecutor and the Snitch By Maurice Possley - The Marsall Project Did Texas execute an innocent man?
- To Connolly and Morris, Bulger was a TE, or top-echelon informant, the highest designation in the Bureau for a snitch.
- "A lot of Mexican dudes got family in Mexico, where the cartels can get at them, so they can't snitch," the prisoner says.
- If your main source is court docs and snitch statements, you have to understand most of that is not very credible.
- Will you promise not to snitch if I tell you how to stop it, even if you don't go there yourself?
- 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.
- Pinkie and this double-crossing snitch went there—and only found a note from the White Moll.
- They've put th' reward out, and three times since last night some of me own pals 've tried to snitch on me.
- Snitch, to give information to the police, to turn approver.