snoops

listen to the pronunciation of snoops
English - English
third-person singular of snoop
plural of snoop
snoop
A private detective

She hired a snoop to find out if her husband was having an affair.

snoop
To secretly spy on or investigate, especially into the private personal life of others

If I had not snooped on her, I wouldn't have found out that she lied about her degree.

snoop
The act of snooping
snoop
watch, observe, or inquire secretly
snoop
One who snoops
snoop
a spy who makes uninvited inquiries into the private affairs of others
snoop
To be devious and cunning so as not to be seen
snoop
{f} pry into the affairs of others, meddle, interfere
snoop
If someone snoops on a person, they watch them secretly in order to find out things about their life. Governments have been known to snoop on innocent citizens. to try to find out about someone's private affairs by secretly looking in their house, examining their possessions etc snoop around/about (snoepen )
snoop
{i} one who snoops, one who pries or meddles; act of prying or meddling; private detective
snoop
If someone snoops around a place, they secretly look around it in order to find out things. Ricardo was the one she'd seen snooping around Kim's hotel room. Snoop is also a noun. The second house that Grossman had a snoop around contained `strong simple furniture'. + snooper snoopers snoop·er St Barth's strange lack of street names is meant to dissuade journalistic snoopers
snoops

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ 'snüp ] (intransitive verb.) 1832. Dutch snoepen to buy or eat on the sly; akin to Dutch snappen to snap.
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