English edit

Adjective edit

sticky-fingered (comparative more sticky-fingered, superlative most sticky-fingered)

  1. (of a person) Possessing the behavioral trait of stealing, especially of engaging in petty theft while handling money or goods.
    • 1990 December 17, “The Five-Fingered Discount”, in Time:
      Sticky-fingered customers and employees make off with $9 billion in merchandise annually.
    • 1991, “Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?”, Sean Altman, David Yazbek (music):
      Well, she sneaks around the world from Kiev to Carolina / She's a sticky-fingered filcher from Berlin down to Belize
    • 2004 May 8, Jonathan LeMire, “Queens Teller Swiped 190G, Cops Say”, in New York Daily News, retrieved 22 July 2011:
      A sticky-fingered teller was charged with stealing more than $190000 from her Queens bank in the past four months.
  2. (sports) Skillful in catching or handling the ball, in such games as baseball, football, basketball, etc.
    • 1963 December 30, “Bears Win, 14 to 10; Take Title”, in Boston Globe, retrieved 22 July 2011, page 13:
      Chicago's sticky-fingered defense intercepted five of YA Tittle's passes.
    • 2007 June 13, Jon Krawczynski, “Twins 7, Braves 3”, in USA Today, retrieved 22 July 2011:
      His batting average has hovered in the .330s all season and he has played his usual sticky-fingered defense at second.

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Translations edit

Verb edit

sticky-fingered

  1. simple past and past participle of sticky-finger

See also edit