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filch
/ fɪltʃ /
verb
- tr to steal or take surreptitiously in small amounts; pilfer
Derived Forms
- ˈfilcher, noun
Other Words From
- filcher noun
- filching·ly adverb
- un·filched adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of filch1
Example Sentences
But then Jack’s bass is filched from his apartment, and his charismatic junkie lead singer, the Banished Earl, vanishes along with it.
Frankie showing off the old service revolver he’d traded a filched pocket watch for, practicing on milk bottles and tin cans.
There, according to his autobiography, Sonny filched pretzels and hard-boiled eggs, and learned his first cuss words from an obscenity-squawking parrot.
With “Avalon,” it’s as though Zink glanced at the mundane little formula that recurs throughout her press clippings and filched it for a plot.
He filched a box of six rocket propelled grenades that he eventually gave to Ukrainian troops.
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