[
US
/ˈsnikɪŋ/
]
[ UK /snˈiːkɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /snˈiːkɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
not openly expressed
a sneaking suspicion
How To Use sneaking In A Sentence
- Kids sneaking into and R-rated film and having to be kicked out after a few minutes by n usher is one thing, but when the parents are taking them is another. R-Rated Movies: How Young Is Too Young? « FirstShowing.net
- Possibly one of the most important memories I have of learning about music as a teenager was me and my mate sneaking into his big brother's bedroom and putting on his records on his super quality hi-fi.
- Without telling anyone, she would work out and kick her bod into shape, even if it meant sneaking in workouts before or after work.
- I have a sneaking feeling though, that the only people who managed to get tickets at the correct prices were the agencies who now seem to be awash with them.
- We have to invent a new method for sneaking prisoners out without being noticed by the guards.
- a sneaking suspicion
- But it's also just as much about sneaking, stealth, hiding, and disguising.
- Personally, I must confess to a sneaking admiration for his acumen, if not for his artistic integrity, but I would not attempt to justify his methods.
- His weapon of choice is a deadly flail and he doesn't balk at finishing off wounded soldiers - or at sneaking up on them and strangling them.
- Even Englishmen who had some sneaking sympathy for the Stuart cause, you were to understand, must have flinched from its wild embodiment.