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mugger ●●●●○
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ESL CEFR | B1
mug‧ger /ˈmʌɡə $ -ər/ noun [countable]
زورگیر، ورزش: میخ چهار تیغه کفش کوهنوردی
▼ ادامه توضیحات دیکشنری؛ پس از بنر تبلیغاتی ▼
English Dictionarymug‧ger /ˈmʌɡə $ -ər/
noun [countable] someone who attacks people in a public place and robs them
[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Thesauruscriminal someone who is involved in illegal activities or has been proved guilty of a crime.
Criminal is used especially about someone who often does things that are illegal:
Criminals are stealing people's credit card details off the Internet.
He is one of the most wanted criminals in the United States.offender someone who breaks the law:
The courts should impose tougher punishments on offenders.
a special prison for young offenderscrook informal a dishonest person, especially one who steals money and who you cannot trust:
Some politicians are crooks, but not all of them.
They're just a bunch of crooks.felon law especially American English someone who has committed a serious crime:
Convicted felons should not be allowed to profit from their crimes.the culprit the person who has done something wrong or illegal:
The culprits were never found.
If I ever catch the culprit, he or she is in big trouble.
The culprits were just six years old.delinquent a young person who behaves badly and is likely to commit crimes - used especially in the phrase
juvenile delinquent:
He later worked with juvenile delinquents in a Florida youth services program.accomplice someone who helps a criminal to do something illegal:
Police believe the murderer must have had an accomplice.thief someone who steals things:
Car thieves have been working in the area.
The thieves stole over £5,000 worth of jewellery.robber someone who steals money or valuable things from a bank, shop etc – used especially when someone sees the person who is stealing:
a masked robber armed with a shotgun
They were the most successful bank robbers in US history.burglar someone who goes into people’s homes in order to steal:
The burglars broke in through a window.shoplifter someone who takes things from shops without paying for them:
The cameras have helped the store catch several shoplifters.pickpocket someone who steals things from people’s pockets, especially in a crowd:
A sign warned that pickpockets were active in the station.conman/fraudster someone who deceives people in order to get money or things:
Conmen tricked the woman into giving them her savings, as an ‘investment’.forger someone who illegally copies official documents, money, artworks etc:
a forger who fooled museum curatorscounterfeiter someone who illegally copies money, official documents, or goods:
Counterfeiters in Colombia are printing almost perfect dollar bills.pirate someone who illegally copies and sells another person’s work:
DVD piratesmugger someone who attacks and robs people in public places:
Muggers took his money and mobile phone.murderer someone who deliberately kills someone else:
His murderer was sentenced to life imprisonment.
the murderer of civil rights activist Medgar Evers
He is a mass murderer (=someone who kills a large number of people).serial killer someone who kills several people, one after the other over a period of time, in a similar way:
Shipman was a trusted family doctor who became Britain's worst serial killer.rapist someone who forces someone else to have sex:
Some rapists drug their victims so that they become unconscious.sex offender someone who is guilty of a crime related to sex:
Too many sex offenders are released from prison early.vandal someone who deliberately damages public property:
Vandals broke most of the school’s windows.arsonist someone who deliberately sets fire to a building:
The warehouse fire may have been the work of an arsonist. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
thief someone who steals things from a person or place:
The thief grabbed her handbag and ran off down the street.
Car thieves are operating in this area.burglar someone who goes into houses, offices etc to steal things:
Burglars broke into the house and took a computer worth £1,000.
Police believe the burglar got in through the kitchen window.robber someone who steals from banks, offices, houses etc, especially using threats or violence:
a gang of bank robbers
an armed robber (=a robber with a gun)shoplifter someone who takes things from shops without paying for them, especially by hiding them in their clothes or in a bag:
The store has installed hidden cameras to catch shoplifters.pickpocket someone who steals from people’s pockets, especially in a crowded public place:
Look out for pickpockets in busy tourist areas.mugger a thief who violently attacks someone in the street and robs them:
The mugger punched him in the face and tried to steal his wallet.joyrider someone who steals a car and drives it very fast for fun:
Police pursued the teenage joyriders across three counties.looter someone who breaks into shops or homes and steals things, after there has been a natural disaster, a war, or a violent protest:
Police chiefs have warned that looters will be shot.bandit a member of an armed group of thieves who travel around attacking people in country areas :
The village was attacked by a gang of bandits.poacher someone who hunts animals, birds etc illegally on other people’s land:
Their job is to prevent poachers from killing the elephants. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
thief someone who steals things:
Car thieves have been working in the area.
The thieves stole over £5,000 worth of jewellery.robber someone who steals money or valuable things from a bank, shop etc – used especially when someone sees the person who is stealing:
a masked robber armed with a shotgun
They were the most successful bank robbers in US history.burglar someone who goes into people’s homes in order to steal:
The burglars broke in through a window.shoplifter someone who takes things from shops without paying for them:
The cameras have helped the store catch several shoplifters.pickpocket someone who steals things from people’s pockets, especially in a crowd:
A sign warned that pickpockets were active in the station.conman/fraudster someone who deceives people in order to get money or things:
Conmen tricked the woman into giving them her savings, as an ‘investment’.forger someone who illegally copies official documents, money, artworks etc:
a forger who fooled museum curatorscounterfeiter someone who illegally copies money, official documents, or goods:
Counterfeiters in Colombia are printing almost perfect dollar bills.pirate someone who illegally copies and sells another person’s work:
DVD piratesmugger someone who attacks and robs people in public places:
Muggers took his money and mobile phone.murderer someone who deliberately kills someone else:
His murderer was sentenced to life imprisonment.
the murderer of civil rights activist Medgar Evers
He is a mass murderer (=someone who kills a large number of people).serial killer someone who kills several people, one after the other over a period of time, in a similar way:
Shipman was a trusted family doctor who became Britain's worst serial killer.rapist someone who forces someone else to have sex:
Some rapists drug their victims so that they become unconscious.sex offender someone who is guilty of a crime related to sex:
Too many sex offenders are released from prison early.vandal someone who deliberately damages public property:
Vandals broke most of the school’s windows.arsonist someone who deliberately sets fire to a building:
The warehouse fire may have been the work of an arsonist.copy to deliberately make or produce something that is exactly like another thing:
You could copy the files onto a CD.
Many people have tried to copy his paintings.photocopy to copy a piece of paper with writing or pictures on it, using a machine:
I’ll photocopy the letter and give it to you.reproduce to print a copy of a picture or document, especially in a book or newspaper:
The image has been reproduced in many magazines and newspapers around the world.forge to illegally copy something written or printed:
He forged my signature.
forged £10 notes [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲