A thief is a thief no matter if he/she is male or female. There is no gender for thief.
The feminine form of "thief" is "thief." The word does not change based on gender.
The possessive form of "the hands of the thief" is "the thief's hands."
The name "Rohan" is of Indian origin and means "thief" or "professional thief" in Sanskrit.
Thief.
Are the police catching the thief. active - The police caught the thief. passive - The thief was caught
Thief is the noun.It can be formed from the verb thieve.
A thief can be either a male or a female criminal who steals.
A thief is a thief no matter if he/she is male or female. There is no gender for thief.
No, she was not a thief.
You would send a thief to catch a thief, because a thief would know where a thief would go or what he might do to avoid detection.
The thief got away. The thief was caught.
The possessive form of "the hands of the thief" is "the thief's hands."
A panel thief is a thief who operates in a panel house.
The name "Rohan" is of Indian origin and means "thief" or "professional thief" in Sanskrit.
Ladrón is a Spanish equivalent of 'thief'. The word in Spanish is pronounced 'lah-DROHN'. It's a masculine gender noun whose definite article is 'el' ['the'], and whose indefinite article is 'uno' ['a, one'].That's what's used in describing a male 'thief'. Ladronais the feminine equivalent. It's pronounced 'lah-DROH-nah'. Its definite article is 'la', and its indefinite 'una'.
From the Cary Grant film (1955) and the Robert Wagner TV series (1968), the theme is "it takes a thief to catch a thief". The original proverb is "set a thief to catch a thief".
No, thief is a noun.
Thief.