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"purloin" Definitions
  1. purloin something (from somebody/something) to steal something or use it without permission

24 Sentences With "purloin"

How to use purloin in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "purloin" and check conjugation/comparative form for "purloin". Mastering all the usages of "purloin" from sentence examples published by news publications.

How do we make sure governments don't purloin this third industrial revolution infrastructure for their political ends or internet companies don't purloin this and capture all our private data to build monopolies?
Federal prosecutors now say China used the program to purloin sensitive technology.
That's what happened in 2000, when the family had to pressure Jeb to help purloin Florida.
Or, to purloin a line from his novel: Are we all characters in a Beckett play directed by Sartre?
Some lawmakers worry that cameras installed in commercial airplane seats could be misused to snoop, hack and purloin private, proprietary data.
The researchers then used what cryptographers describe as a "side channel" attack to purloin the key that Philips uses to authenticate new software.
Gail: As our colleague Frank Bruni pointed out, the Democrats got to purloin all the old Republican arguments about patriotism, honoring the military, American exceptionalism.
Largely because of the plot, in which a bedraggled hack (Ewan McGregor) goes to interview the reclusive Davis, and tries to purloin a reel of recorded tape.
Formerly, most such attacks appeared intended to cause social disruption or purloin secret data, and the targets were generally the computer networks of government agencies or media companies in countries it considered hostile.
Without somebody working for them inside Jim's locked office, there was no telling how many of the nation's most closely guarded secrets Jim would purloin and sell to the Russians during daylight duties in the CTC.
With regard to the crimes Russians hackers committed to purloin emails from the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton campaign, Mueller at one point noted that his investigation found "insufficient evidence of the president's culpability" to bring charges.
The question that matters is the degree to which Russia employed its intelligence services to purloin confidential information from the Clinton campaign and Democratic Party as well as how it used stolen information and disinformation to sway public opinion.
Scott Eastwood and Freddie Thorp play Andrew Foster and Garrett Foster, car-thief brothers and ostensibly lovable rogues whose outlandish attempt to purloin a magnificent Bugatti runs them afoul of a pair of psychopathic rival car collectors in Marseille.
To purloin the words used of another Tory leader: [Prime Minister Theresa May] remains 'in office but not in power,' dependent on the goodwill of one of most sectarian and sectional political parties in the UK." Great N.Y. Times online headline for print lead story: "The British Election That Somehow Made Brexit Even Harder.
These exhibition dates will hopefully give the curatorial team long enough to figure out how to unfold the suit from the necklace that conceals it when not in use, as well as enable special training for security at the nearby sister Smithsonian, the National Museum of African Art, in case any antiquities enthusiasts show up trying to purloin artifacts that are secretly made of vibranium.
British sportsmen who had served in South India during the early years of the Raj have been known to import this practice to their homes in Europe. Otter fishing is also reported from Central and South America. A Maxacali creation story from Brazil suggests that the practice of otter fishing may have been prevalent in the past. Fishermen from Guyana used a different tactic – they would observe where an otter deposited its catch and later purloin the fish.
Jake goes back to Sadie's flat to purloin her copy of The Silencer, but on approaching her door he overhears a conversation between her and Sammy about his most recent translation. His prolonged eavesdropping attracts the puzzled attention of neighbours, but he manages to deduce that Sadie and Sammy are planning to use his translation of Le Rossignol de Bois as the basis of a film proposal, and that they are not planning to recompense him for its use. He is furious.
In the five-issue miniseries, Terror was once a warlord of Attain who took part in the Sack of Rome. As retaliation the Pope sent a mare against the warlord village, prompting him to slay the demon and eat her heart. Unbeknownst to him, this heinous act cursed him and he was turned into a rotting corpse, a thing he discovered when the decaying was so gruesome that his tribesmen exiled him. He discovered he could purloin parts from corpses and add them to his body.
Mike Farrell (O'Brien) is induced by con artists Brandy Kirby (Scott) and attorney Vincent Mailer (Knox) to purloin a rich couple's ten million dollar estate by having Farrell pose as their long-lost son. When the old man refuses to change his will, Mailer decides to kill them, and Kirby plays along. Farrell refuses to assist, and Mailer plans to kill him too. After a botched attempt, with Kirby's help, Farrell exposes the scam to the old man, dooming Mailer's plan, and allowing Kirby and Farrell to unite, as 'Two of a Kind'.
"The Hoard of the Gibbelins" is a fantasy short story by Anglo-Irish writer Lord Dunsany. It was first published in The Sketch in London and in The Book of Wonder in 1912. It was also reprinted in the anthology The Spell of Seven, edited by L. Sprague de Camp. The story, only 4.5 pages long in paperback, tells of the exploits of Alderic, Knight of the Order of the City, to seek and purloin the fabled hoard of precious gems rumoured to be held in the castle of the Gibbelins.
In the meantime, Claire has gone missing; Jericho's attempt to phone her father Edward Romilly is rebuffed. He approaches her flatmate Hester and the two learn that the cryptograms Jericho found had originated from Smolensk in the German-occupied Soviet Union. Hester discovers that the cryptograms were part of a series sent to German Army High Command but that interception and decryption of the signals at Bletchley were abruptly terminated by high authority for unknown reasons. Hester and Jericho bluff their way into a signals receiving station and purloin copies of the full set of undeciphered signals.
Covering a total of , even later rivals such as Ramesses II's Ramesseum or Ramesses III's Medinet Habu were unable to match it in area; even the Temple of Karnak, as it stood in Amenhotep's time, was smaller. alt= With the exception of the Colossi, however, very little remains today of Amenhotep's temple. It stood on the edge of the Nile floodplain, and successive annual inundations gnawed away at its foundations – a famous 1840s lithograph by David Roberts shows the Colossi surrounded by water – and it was not unknown for later rulers to dismantle, purloin, and reuse portions of their predecessors' monuments.
With the latter they proceeded to further measures. At the end of October Boisdeffre had ordered General Leclerc, commanding the corps of occupation in Tunis, to send Picquart to reconnoitre on the frontier of Tripoli, from which quarter pretended gatherings of the local tribes were reported. It was a dangerous region, where Morès had met his death; General Leclerc was astonished at the order, and, having heard from Picquart the cause of his disgrace, forbade him to go farther than Gabes. Some days later Picquart had to clear himself of the accusation of allowing a woman to purloin the "document of deliverance" of Esterhazy.
Famished one day, he punched another child during an altercation, and he was subsequently placed in observation in a psychiatric ward of a medical institution. His mother, opposed to such treatment of her child, removed him from the institution and found work for him in a mortuary near Santa Maria Formosa, where he dusted coffins and dressed the corpses. Pipino began stealing when eight years old, by which time he was working as an errand boy at a bakery and would occasionally purloin a pastry when hungry. His first theft was a 50-litre aluminum milk churn which he had to roll along the alleys; it was crushed and sold to a junk dealer.

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