TOP

Definition of burgle verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

burgle

verb
 
/ˈbɜːɡl/
 
/ˈbɜːrɡl/
(British English)
(North American English burglarize
 
/ˈbɜːɡləraɪz/
 
/ˈbɜːrɡləraɪz/
)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they burgle
 
/ˈbɜːɡl/
 
/ˈbɜːrɡl/
he / she / it burgles
 
/ˈbɜːɡlz/
 
/ˈbɜːrɡlz/
past simple burgled
 
/ˈbɜːɡld/
 
/ˈbɜːrɡld/
past participle burgled
 
/ˈbɜːɡld/
 
/ˈbɜːrɡld/
-ing form burgling
 
/ˈbɜːɡlɪŋ/
 
/ˈbɜːrɡlɪŋ/
jump to other results
  1. burgle somebody/something to enter a building illegally, usually using force, and steal from it
    • We were burgled while we were away (= our house was burgled).
    • The house next door was burgled.
    Collocations CrimeCrimeCommitting a crime
    • commit a crime/​a murder/​a violent assault/​a brutal killing/​an armed robbery/​fraud
    • be involved in terrorism/​a suspected arson attack/​human trafficking
    • engage/​participate in criminal activity/​illegal practices/​acts of mindless vandalism
    • steal somebody’s wallet/​purse/(British English) mobile phone/(North American English) cell phone
    • rob a bank/​a person/​a tourist
    • break into/ (British English) burgle/ (North American English) burglarize a house/​a home/​an apartment
    • hijack a plane/​ship/​bus
    • smuggle drugs/​weapons/​arms
    • traffic people/​wildlife/​narcotics/​cocaine
    • launder drug money (through something)
    • forge documents/​certificates/​passports
    • take/​accept/​pay somebody/​offer (somebody) a bribe
    • run a phishing/​an email/​an internet scam
    Fighting crime
    • combat/​fight crime/​terrorism/​corruption/​drug trafficking
    • prevent/​stop credit-card fraud/​child abuse/​software piracy
    • deter/​stop criminals/​burglars/​thieves/​shoplifters/​vandals
    • reduce/​tackle/​crack down on knife/​gun/​violent/​street crime; (especially British English) antisocial behaviour
    • foil a bank raid/​a terrorist plot
    • help/​support/​protect the victims of crime
    Investigating crime
    • report a crime/​a theft/​a rape/​an attack/(especially British English) an incident to the police
    • witness the crime/​attack/​murder/​incident
    • investigate a murder/(especially North American English) a homicide/​a burglary/​a robbery/​the alleged incident
    • conduct/​launch/​pursue an investigation (into…); (especially British English) a police/​murder inquiry
    • investigate/​reopen a criminal/​murder case
    • examine/​investigate/​find fingerprints at the crime scene/​the scene of crime
    • collect/​gather forensic evidence
    • uncover new evidence/​a fraud/​a scam/​a plot/​a conspiracy/​political corruption/​a cache of weapons
    • describe/​identify a suspect/​the culprit/​the perpetrator/​the assailant/​the attacker
    • question/​interrogate a suspect/​witness
    • solve/​crack the case
    Topics Crime and punishmentb1
    Word Originlate 19th cent.: originally a humorous and colloquial back-formation from burglar.
See burgle in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
trait
noun
 
 
From the Word list
Oxford 5000
B2
Oxford Learner's Dictionaries Word of the Day