Difference between revisions of "Language/English/Vocabulary/Difference-between-ROBBER,-BURGLAR,-MUGGER-and-THIEF"

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m (Reverted previous edit - short forms "sth" and "sb" are standard for showing syntactic patterns associated with word usage. B2 level would/should know this....)
 
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<div class="pg_page_title">Differences between:<br>ROBBER, BURGLAR, MUGGER, PICKPOCKET & THIEF?</div>
<div class="pg_page_title">Differences between:<br>ROBBER, BURGLAR, MUGGER, PICKPOCKET & THIEF?</div>
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==Introduction==
In English, there are a large number of words to describe someone who steals things from people - particularly relating to the method which these criminals use to take the items. There are five very common words to describe such people: "burglar", "robber", "mugger", "pickpocket" and "thief".  
In English, there are a large number of words to describe someone who steals things from people - particularly relating to the method which these criminals use to take the items. There are five very common words to describe such people: "burglar", "robber", "mugger", "pickpocket" and "thief".  
 
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<span link>Take some time to dive into these other pages after completing this lesson: [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Words-ending-with-the-suffix-less|Words ending with the suffix less]], [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Common-Acronyms-Social-Media-SMS|Common Acronyms Social Media SMS]] & [[Language/English/Vocabulary/“In-the-office”-or-“at-the-office”|“In the office” or “at the office”]].</span>  
<span link>Take some time to dive into these other pages after completing this lesson: [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Words-ending-with-the-suffix-less|Words ending with the suffix less]], [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Common-Acronyms-Social-Media-SMS|Common Acronyms Social Media SMS]] & [[Language/English/Vocabulary/“In-the-office”-or-“at-the-office”|“In the office” or “at the office”]].</span>  
==Burglar==
==Burglar==

Latest revision as of 22:29, 5 March 2024

Differences between:
ROBBER, BURGLAR, MUGGER, PICKPOCKET & THIEF?
English-Language-PolyglotClub.jpg

In English, there are a large number of words to describe someone who steals things from people - particularly relating to the method which these criminals use to take the items. There are five very common words to describe such people: "burglar", "robber", "mugger", "pickpocket" and "thief".

Take some time to dive into these other pages after completing this lesson: Words ending with the suffix less, Common Acronyms Social Media SMS & “In the office” or “at the office”.

Burglar[edit | edit source]

Someone who breaks in / forces his/her way into a building so as to steal something. It could be for example a home, office or factory. Usually, there is no intended violence directly towards people. The verb used to describe a burglar in the process of stealing something is "to burgle sth", which is more common in British English and "to burglarize sth", seen in American English.

Robber[edit | edit source]

Someone who threatens violence so that he/she can steal something from someone. If the threatened person does not permit the robber to take what the robber wants, then the robber will be violent so that he/she can take what he/she wants from the victim. "to rob sb" is the verb describing a robber "at work".

Mugger[edit | edit source]

Someone who uses violence without any warning to make it possible / easier to steal something from someone. It could be a criminal hitting someone on the head then stealing something from that person. "to mug sb" is the verb describing the violence and stealing done by a mugger.

Pickpocket[edit | edit source]

Someone who steals from someone’s pocket, coat or bag without that person realising that he/she is having something stolen. The thing stolen is directly with/on the victim, not somewhere else such as on a table. The term "pickpocket" originally comes from describing someone who very quickly and with almost no force pulling something - i.e. "picking" - something from someone's pocket. "to pickpocket sb" describes stealing by pickpockets.

Thief[edit | edit source]

This is a general term for someone who steals something without threatening violence. Burglars (usually) and pickpockets can also be classified as thieves (the plural of ”thief”). Someone who takes someone’s wallet from a desk by just walking through a door is a thief, but not a pickpocket or a burglar. The verb for this action is "to thieve sth from sb".

Sources[edit | edit source]

Other Lessons[edit | edit source]