housebreaker
See also: house-breaker and house breaker
English
Etymology
From house + breaker.
Noun
housebreaker (plural housebreakers)
- A criminal who breaks into and enters another's house or premises with the intent of committing a crime.
- Synonym: (slang) drummer [Britain]
- Alternative forms: house breaker, house-breaker
- 1869 May, Anthony Trollope, “Miss Stanbury’s Generosity”, in He Knew He Was Right, volume I, London: Strahan and Company, […], OCLC 1118026626, page 93:
- [H]e is dressed in such a rapscallion manner that the people would think you were talking to a house-breaker.
- 1968 November 19, "‘Infuriated’ vicar's wife routs interloper," Montreal Gazette (Canada), page 9 (retrieved 21 Sep 2010):
- The vicar seized a sword and routed the housebreaker, but it was the vicar's wife in a nightgown and coat who caught up with the fleeing intruder, slapped his face and held him by the neck.
- 2009 May 20, "Serial housebreaker nabbed," AsiaOne (Singapore) (retrieved 21 Sep 2010):
- A serial housebreaker who is believed to have stolen from several homes in Ang Mo Kio last month was nabbed on Tuesday.
Translations
criminal
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See also
- burglar