burglar
English
Etymology
Middle English, shortened from Middle English burgulator, from Medieval Latin (Anglo-Latin) burglātor, from Old French burgeor (“burglar”), from Medieval Latin burgātor (“burglar”), from burgāre (“to commit burglary”), from Late Latin burgus (“fortified town”), probably from Frankish *burg (“fortress”), from Proto-Germanic *burgz, *burgiją (“borough, watch-tower”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰerǵʰ- (“high, heights”). The -l- may have been inserted under influence from Latin latro (“thief”).
Noun
burglar (plural burglars)
- A thief who steals from premises.
- The burglar made off with a large diamond from the museum.
Related terms
Translations
thief who steals from premises
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Verb
burglar (third-person singular simple present burglars, present participle burglaring, simple past and past participle burglared)
- (transitive, intransitive) To commit burglary; to burgle.
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