larceny
111Contractio rei alienae animo furandi, est furtum — Larceny is the taking and carrying away of a thing with intent to steal …
112crimen furti — Larceny. See furti crimen …
113furtum est contrectatio fraudulosa, lucri faciendi gratia, vet ipsius rei, vet etiam usus, possessionisve — Larceny is the fraudulent taking or making use of a thing, or of the possession of it, for the sake of making gain …
114furtum est contrectatio rei alienae fraudulenta, cum animo furandi, invito illo domino cujus res illa fuerat — Larceny is the fraudulent taking of the goods of another with intent to steal and against the will of the person in whose control they were …
115pilferage — Larceny or stealing, particularly stealing something of small value. Anno: 48 ALR2d 20. Filching or taking a small part only, rather than the whole. 32 Am J1st Larc § 2. Ruin by depredation. Anno: 38 ALR 1125 …
116wealreaf — Larceny from a buried corpse …
117larcenist — larceny ► NOUN (pl. larcenies) ▪ theft of personal property (in English law replaced as a statutory crime by theft in 1968). DERIVATIVES larcenist noun larcenous adjective. ORIGIN Old French larcin, from Latin latro robber …
118larcenous — larceny ► NOUN (pl. larcenies) ▪ theft of personal property (in English law replaced as a statutory crime by theft in 1968). DERIVATIVES larcenist noun larcenous adjective. ORIGIN Old French larcin, from Latin latro robber …
119False pretenses — For the films, see False Pretenses (film). Criminal law …
120theft — /theft/, n. 1. the act of stealing; the wrongful taking and carrying away of the personal goods or property of another; larceny. 2. an instance of this. 3. Archaic. something stolen. [bef. 900; ME; OE thefth, theofth; see THIEF, TH1; c. ON thyfth …