robber, burglar, housebreaker, shoplifter, pickpocket, purse snatcher, sneak thief, embezzler, swindler, criminal, crook, bandit.
The thief got away. The thief was caught.
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".
Only a thief knows how another thief will think and act. Can be extended to other professions and descriptions.
The crisis in the Lightning Thief is when the bolt was stolen from Olympus, which led on to the beginning of the Lightning Thief's story.
Do you mean Percy Jackson? No, he was not the Lightening Thief. Luke Callestan was the actual thief.
A thief can be either a male or a female criminal who steals.
One example of alliteration in "The Book Thief" is in the phrase "frighteningly frail." Alliteration is the repetition of the same initial consonant sound in neighboring words.
No, she was not a thief.
A thief is a thief no matter if he/she is male or female. There is no gender for thief.
from what i read from the book and saw from the movie, Percy is trying to find the lightning thief but at the same time people think HE stole the lightning bolt.
Chris Columbus, the same person who directed The Lightning 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 1955 romantic thriller movie "To Catch a Thief" was directed by Alfred Hitchcock from a screenplay by John Michael Hayes that was loosely based on a novel of the same name.
A thief is a thief no matter if he/she is male or female. There is no gender for thief.