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Từ điển Việt Anh Việt 4in1 - English Vietnamese 4 in 1 Dictionary 
	
		   
 rob     
  rob S3 /rɒb $ rɑːb/ BrE  AmE  verb (past tense and past participle robbed, present participle robbing) [transitive]   [Date: 1200-1300; Language: Old French; Origin: rober]   1. to steal money or property from a person, bank etc ⇨ steal, burgle:         They killed four policemen while robbing a bank.        A 77-year-old woman was robbed at knifepoint.    rob somebody of something        They threatened to shoot him and robbed him of all his possessions.     ► You say that someone robs a person or place. Do not say that someone robs an object or an amount of money. Use steal: He stole cash and valuables worth $500,000.   2. rob Peter to pay Paul to take money away from someone or something that needs it in order to pay someone else or use it for something else:         Taking money out of the hospital’s budget for this is simply robbing Peter to pay Paul.   3. rob somebody blind informal to steal everything someone has:         The minute your back’s turned, they’ll rob you blind.   4. I/we was robbed! British English spoken used when you think that you were beaten unfairly in a sport   5. rob the cradle American English to have a sexual relationship with someone who is a lot younger than you – used humorously SYN cradle-snatch British English   rob somebody/something of something phrasal verb literary     to take away an important quality, ability etc from someone or something:         The illness robbed him of a normal childhood.       • • •   THESAURUS     ▪ steal to illegally take something that belongs to someone else:  The thieves stole over £10,000 worth of computer equipment. |  Thousands of cars get stolen every year.     ▪ take to steal something – used when it is clear from the situation that you mean that someone takes something dishonestly:  The boys broke into her house and took all her money. |  They didn’t take much – just a few items of jewellery.     ▪ burgle British English, burglarize American English [usually passive] to go into someone’s home and steal things, especially when the owners are not there:  Their house was burgled while they were away. |  If you leave windows open, you are asking to be burgled.     ▪ rob to steal money or other things from a bank, shop, or person:  The gang were convicted of robbing a bank in Essex. |  An elderly woman was robbed at gunpoint in her own home. |  He’s serving a sentence for robbing a grocery store.     ▪ mug to attack someone in the street and steal something from them:  People in this area are frightened of being mugged when they go out. |  Someone tried to mug me outside the station.     ▪ nick/pinch British English informal to steal something:  Someone’s nicked my wallet! |  When I came back, my car had been pinched.     ▪ embezzle to steal money from the organization you work for, especially money that you are responsible for:  Government officials embezzled more than $2.5 million from the department.     ▪ shoplifting stealing things from a shop by taking them when you think no one is looking:  Shoplifting costs stores millions of pounds every year.     ▪ phishing the activity of dishonestly persuading people to give you their credit card details over the Internet, so that you can steal money from their bank account:  Phishing is becoming very popular with computer criminals.
  robhu| ◎ | [rɔb] |  | ※ | ngoại động từ |  |   | ■ | cướp, cướp đoạt; lấy trộm |  |   | ☆ | to rob somebody of something  |  |   | cướp đoạt (lấy trộm) của ai cái gì  |  |   | ■ | phạm tội ăn cướp |  |   | 〆 | to rob one's belly to cover one's back |  |   | ✓ | (tục ngữ) lấy của người này để cho người khác |  |   | 〆 | rob Peter to pay Paul |  |   | ✓ | vay chỗ này đập vào chỗ kia; giật gấu vá vai |  
 
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