[ US /ˈsnɪtʃ/ ]
[ UK /snˈɪt‍ʃ/ ]
VERB
  1. take by theft
    Someone snitched my wallet!
  2. give away information about somebody
    He told on his classmate who had cheated on the exam
NOUN
  1. someone acting as an informer or decoy for the police
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How To Use snitch In A Sentence

  • I sat for a moment, wondering what on earth Kip would have done to me once he learned - if he did not already know - that it was I who snitched, when something stung the side of my face a bit.
  • And he was so scared, he did not go to school yesterday because he sensed that, for being what they call a snitch, something bad would happen to him. CNN Transcript Oct 13, 2009
  • The word 'snitch' puts witnesses in a category where they have done something wrong, this is not the case. Evening Standard - Home
  • Trey kicked at it as he snitched a chocolate chip cookie from Blake's lunch.
  • But the gist of the film is the meeting of the criminals and their interaction to identify the snitch.
  • Well, being a snitch or an informant does not make you martyr or mean that you are really copping out.
  • He is being held on suspicion of traveling with an invalid passport, but Bosnitch said Fischer was never notified by the U.S. government that his passport was revoked.
  • I asked him when we were going to that other place and he would not tell me; he was quite snitchy.
  • Everyone co-operated in making sure that good manners were maintained, even if it meant snitching on people who used bad language.
  • Nurses also may not report other nurses for fear of being perceived as snitches or labeled as whistle-blowers.
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