sneaking

[snee-king] /ˈsni kɪŋ/
adjective
1.
acting in a furtive or underhand way.
2.
deceitfully underhand, as actions; contemptible.
3.
secret; not generally avowed, as a feeling, notion, suspicion, etc.
Origin
1575-85; sneak + -ing2
Related forms
sneakingly, adverb
sneakingness, noun
unsneaking, adjective

sneak

[sneek] /snik/
verb (used without object), sneaked or snuck, sneaking.
1.
to go in a stealthy or furtive manner; slink; skulk.
2.
to act in a furtive or underhand way.
3.
British Informal. to tattle; inform.
verb (used with object), sneaked or snuck, sneaking.
4.
to move, put, pass, etc., in a stealthy or furtive manner:
He sneaked the gun into his pocket.
5.
to do, take, or enjoy hurriedly or surreptitiously:
to sneak a cigarette.
noun
6.
a sneaking, underhand, or contemptible person.
7.
Informal. a stealthy or furtive departure.
8.
British Informal. tattletale; informer.
9.
sneaker (def 1).
10.
Informal. a sneak preview.
11.
Cards. the lead of a singleton in a suit other than the trump suit, as in whist.
Origin
1590-1600; variant of Middle English sniken, Old English snīcan to creep; cognate with Old Norse snīkja to hanker after
Synonyms
1. steal. See lurk.
Usage note
First recorded in writing toward the end of the 19th century in the United States, snuck has become in recent decades a standard variant past tense and past participle of the verb sneak: Bored by the lecture, he snuck out the side door. Snuck occurs frequently in fiction and in journalistic writing as well as on radio and television: In the darkness the sloop had snuck around the headland, out of firing range. It is not so common in highly formal or belletristic writing, where sneaked is more likely to occur. Snuck is the only spoken past tense and past participle for many younger and middle-aged persons of all educational levels in the U. S. and Canada. Snuck has occasionally been considered nonstandard, but it is so widely used by professional writers and educated speakers that it can no longer be so regarded.
Examples from the web for sneaking
  • They seem to be gnawing holes through the walls and sneaking in under our secondary coop.
  • Pets are not allowed, and the hotel will charge guests found sneaking in pets.
  • Inclement weather has a way of sneaking up on your when you are traveling in the backcountry.
  • He was clearly neglected, so she started sneaking him food.
  • The whole family will have fun while sneaking in some great learning.
  • But the millions who risk their lives sneaking across the desert are motivated by something deeper than a wage.
  • Many of the houses in the area even had a turnstile as an entry to keep the curious horses from sneaking in for a snack.
  • The new business proved more lucrative than sneaking cyanide to the coral reefs.
  • All three enjoy sneaking about and defying their parents, especially when it comes to drinking liquor.
  • But there they are, sneaking their gifts into the crevices of change.
British Dictionary definitions for sneaking

sneaking

/ˈsniːkɪŋ/
adjective
1.
acting in a furtive or cowardly way
2.
secret: a sneaking desire to marry a millionaire
3.
slight but nagging (esp in the phrase a sneaking suspicion)
Derived Forms
sneakingly, adverb
sneakingness, noun

sneak

/sniːk/
verb
1.
(intransitive; often foll by along, off, in, etc) to move furtively
2.
(intransitive) to behave in a cowardly or underhand manner
3.
(transitive) to bring, take, or put stealthily
4.
(intransitive) (informal, mainly Brit) to tell tales (esp in schools)
5.
(transitive) (informal) to steal
6.
(intransitive; foll by off, out, away, etc) (informal) to leave unobtrusively
noun
7.
a person who acts in an underhand or cowardly manner, esp as an informer
8.
  1. a stealthy act or movement
  2. (as modifier): a sneak attack
9.
(Brit, informal) an unobtrusive departure
Derived Forms
sneaky, adjective
sneakily, adverb
sneakiness, noun
Word Origin
Old English snīcan to creep; from Old Norse snīkja to hanker after
Word Origin and History for sneaking

sneak

v.

1550s (implied in sneakish), perhaps from some dialectal survival of Middle English sniken "to creep, crawl" (c.1200), related to Old English snican "to sneak along, creep, crawl," from Proto-Germanic *sneikanan, which is related to the root of snake (n.). Of feelings, suspicions, etc., from 1748. Transitive sense, "to partake of surreptitiously" is from 1883. Related: Sneaking. Sneak-thief first recorded 1859; sneak-preview is from 1938.

n.

"a sneaking person; mean, contemptible fellow," 1640s, from sneak (v.).

Slang definitions & phrases for sneaking

sneak

noun

(also sneak preview): After a sneak in Chicago they decided to shelve it

verb

To show a movie unexpectedly to an audience in order to assess its appeal: We sneaked it in several cities (1960s+ Movie studio)