- hurto
- m.theft.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: hurtar.* * *hurto► nombre masculino1 petty theft, pilfering* * *noun m.theft* * *SM1) (=robo) robbery; (Jur) larceny
cometió un hurto — he committed a robbery
- a hurto2) (=botín) (piece of) stolen property, loot, thing stolen* * *masculino (frml) (robo) robbery, theft; (cosas robadas) stolen goods (pl), stolen property* * *= petty theft, theft, larceny, stealing, thieving, pilfering, pilferage, thievery.Ex. The authorities had in mind the book's endemic lying, the petty thefts, the denigrations of respect and religion, the bad language and the bad grammar.Ex. I have never seen any statistics showing that nonbook materials are more subject to theft than books.Ex. The article is entitled 'Library and archival crime: some recent larcenies, misappropriations and other peccadilloes'.Ex. The stealing of books and mutilation of reading materials are common in many libraries: only the magnitude of the crime may differ.Ex. A major concern for organisations today is the protection of competitive information from thieving.Ex. Through bad planning or management in any type of library, long queues develop at the check out points; this results in user frustration and, consequently, pilfering.Ex. The article is entitled 'Book pilferage is not banditry: information interchange across cultural boundaries'.Ex. Due to economic depression, lap dog thievery is now on the increase.----* hurto en tienda = shoplifting.* * *masculino (frml) (robo) robbery, theft; (cosas robadas) stolen goods (pl), stolen property* * *= petty theft, theft, larceny, stealing, thieving, pilfering, pilferage, thievery.Ex: The authorities had in mind the book's endemic lying, the petty thefts, the denigrations of respect and religion, the bad language and the bad grammar.
Ex: I have never seen any statistics showing that nonbook materials are more subject to theft than books.Ex: The article is entitled 'Library and archival crime: some recent larcenies, misappropriations and other peccadilloes'.Ex: The stealing of books and mutilation of reading materials are common in many libraries: only the magnitude of the crime may differ.Ex: A major concern for organisations today is the protection of competitive information from thieving.Ex: Through bad planning or management in any type of library, long queues develop at the check out points; this results in user frustration and, consequently, pilfering.Ex: The article is entitled 'Book pilferage is not banditry: information interchange across cultural boundaries'.Ex: Due to economic depression, lap dog thievery is now on the increase.* hurto en tienda = shoplifting.* * *hurtomasculine(frml)1 (robo) robbery, theft2 (en tienda) shoplifting3 (cosas robadas) stolen goods (pl), stolen property* * *
Del verbo hurtar: (conjugate hurtar)
hurto es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
hurtó es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
hurtar
hurto
hurtar (conjugate hurtar) verbo transitivo (frml) to purloin (frml), to steal
hurto sustantivo masculino (frml) (robo) robbery, theft;
(en las tiendas) shoplifting
hurtar verbo transitivo to steal, pilfer
hurto sustantivo masculino petty theft, pilfering
'hurto' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
sustracción
- robo
English:
pilfering
- shoplifting
- theft
- shop
* * *hurto nm1. [robo] theft2. [botín] stolen goods* * *hurtom theft* * *hurto nm1) : theft, robbery2) : stolen property, loot* * *hurto n shoplifting
Spanish-English dictionary. 2013.