gas and dash
See also: gas-and-dash
English
Alternative forms
- gas-and-dash
Noun
gas and dash (plural gas and dashes)
- (informal, Canada and US, often hyphenated (especially when used attributively)) The act of driving away from a gasoline station without paying after filling one's gas tank.
- 2011 June 8, Bob Mitchell, “‘We will find you,’ police warn driver in gas-and-dash death”, in Toronto Star, Canada:
- Everyone in Ontario who owns a 2002 to 2006 Nissan Altima will be contacted under an intense police investigation now under way to find the driver responsible for a deadly gas-and-dash theft.
- 2012 October 16, Timothy Appleby, “Crime Stoppers launches ‘gas and dash’ awareness campaign”, in Globe and Mail, Canada:
- [A] private member’s bill . . . would compel drivers to prepay for all gas purchases. . . . [S]ince British Columbia put a similar law in place, gas-and-dashes have ceased.
- 2014 March 28, “Innisfail RCMP Investigate Gas and Dash”, in www.albertapolicereport.ca, Canada:
- In the late evening of March 27, 2014 RCMP Innisfail received a complaint of theft of fuel (gas and dash) from the Penhold Fas Gas.
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Synonyms
- drive-off, fill and flee, fill and fly, gas and go, pump and jump
Verb
gas and dash
- (informal, Canada and US, sometimes hyphenated) To commit this act.
- 2000 June 23, “Gas-and-dash thefts rise with high fuel prices”, in Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, US: Associated Press:
- Starting July 1, Kansas motorists who repeatedly gas and dash could lose their driver's licenses.
- 2005 August 16, Logan Orlando, “Don't Try to Gas and Dash”, in Time, US:
- With the price of gas up 26% over the past year . . . too many Americans are filling up without paying up.
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