Jump to content

sleuth

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

English

Pronunciation

Etymology 1

Clipping of sleuthhound.

Noun

sleuth (plural sleuths)

  1. A detective.
    Synonyms: detective, gumshoe, investigator, dick, private eye
    • 1908, Edith Van Dyne (Frank L. Baum), Aunt Jane’s Nieces at Millville
      Do ye want me to become a sleuth, or engage detectives to track the objects of your erroneous philanthropy?
    • 2021 June 23, Carl Zimmer, quoting Michael Worobey, “Scientist Finds Early Virus Sequences That Had Been Mysteriously Deleted”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
      “This is a great piece of sleuth work for sure, and it significantly advances efforts to understand the origin of SARS-CoV-2,” said Michael Worobey, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Arizona who was not involved in the study.
  2. (archaic) A sleuthhound; a bloodhound.
  3. (obsolete) An animal’s trail or track.
Derived terms
Translations

Verb

sleuth (third-person singular simple present sleuths, present participle sleuthing, simple past and past participle sleuthed)

  1. (intransitive, transitive) To act as a detective; to try to discover who committed a crime, or, more generally, to solve a mystery.
    • 1922, Agatha Christie, The Secret Adversary:
      We must discover where he lives, what he does — sleuth him, in fact!
Synonyms
Translations

Etymology 2

From Old English slǣwþ, corresponding to slow + -th.

Noun

sleuth (plural sleuths)

  1. (obsolete, uncountable) Slowness; laziness, sloth.
    Synonyms: idleness, inertia, laziness, lethargy, sloth, slothfulness
  2. (rare, collective) A group of bears.
    Synonym: sloth
    • 1961, Noel Perrin, A Passport Secretly Green, page 89:
      As quietly as if I were practicing to join a sleuth of bears, I crept out the door and went on home, eventually winding up in the garage…
    • 1995, Bobbie Ann Mason, The Girl Sleuth, page 13:
      If these dainty adventurers weren’t being chased by a sleuth of bears or bogeys, they were being captured by Gypsies or thieves.
    • 2007, Elinor DeWire, The Lightkeepers’ Menagerie: Stories of Animals at Lighthouses, page 200:
      From the darkness came the howls of routs of wolves and bands of coyotes, the rumbling growls of a sleuth of bears or the bugles of a gang of elk.

See also

References

Anagrams