Conspirin' thick as thieves, they was, guv'nor.
The bank thieves were thwarted when their getaway car stalled.
The thieves crept into the museum at night.
The thieves broke into the jewelry store and stole all the valuable items. The police managed to catch the thieves before they could escape with the stolen money. The thieves were notorious for targeting luxury cars in the wealthy neighborhood.
The possessive form of the plural noun thieves is thieves'.Example: The thieves' hideout was raided by the police.
Thieves is already plural. The singular is thief.
crooks or thieves
A gang of thieves just stole my phone
The thieves crept into the museum at night.
The thieves were scurrying away from the police with very posh things
I avoid the part of the city that has too many criminals and thieves in it.There are about 10 million thieves in the world.
The sanctity of the pyramids was violated by thieves.
The thieves shared the spoils from the town.
The band of car thieves has struck again!
was arrested
The thieves broke into the jewelry store and stole all the valuable items. The police managed to catch the thieves before they could escape with the stolen money. The thieves were notorious for targeting luxury cars in the wealthy neighborhood.
The correct punctuation for the sentence is: "This morning, the thieves were arrested." A comma is placed after "morning" to separate the introductory phrase from the main clause.
In days of yore, thieves were placed in a pillory as part of their punishment.
As a verb: The video showed the thieves break the glass and plunder the jewelry display.As a noun: The thieves were easily identified because they still had the plunder in their vehicle.