[
US
/ˈsnɪtʃ/
]
[ UK /snˈɪtʃ/ ]
[ UK /snˈɪtʃ/ ]
VERB
-
take by theft
Someone snitched my wallet! -
give away information about somebody
He told on his classmate who had cheated on the exam
NOUN
- someone acting as an informer or decoy for the police
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with an invalid passport, but Bosnitch said Fischer was never notified by the U.S. government that his passport was revoked.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.