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| to steal or take dishonestly (money, esp. public funds, or property entrusted to one's care); embezzle. |
| to flee; abscond: |
| spade1 (speɪd) | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a tool for digging, typically consisting of a flat rectangular steel blade attached to a long wooden handle |
| 2. | a. an object or part resembling a spade in shape |
| b. (as modifier): a spade beard | |
| 3. | a heavy metallic projection attached to the trail of a gun carriage that embeds itself into the ground and so reduces recoil |
| 4. | Compare spoon a type of oar blade that is comparatively broad and short |
| 5. | a cutting tool for stripping the blubber from a whale or skin from a carcass |
| 6. | call a spade a spade to speak plainly and frankly |
| —vb | |
| 7. | (tr) to use a spade on |
| [Old English spadu; related to Old Norse spathi, Old High German spato, Greek spathē blade] | |
| 'spader1 | |
| —n | |
| spade2 (speɪd) | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a. the black symbol on a playing card resembling a heart-shaped leaf with a stem |
| b. a card with one or more of these symbols or (when pl) the suit of cards so marked, usually the highest ranking of the four | |
| 2. | a derogatory word for Black |
| 3. | informal in spades in an extreme or emphatic way |
| [C16: from Italian spada sword, used as an emblem on playing cards, from Latin spatha, from Greek spathē blade, broadsword] | |
"The invitations to the musicale came sliding in by pairs and threes and spade flushes." [O.Henry, "Cabbages & Kings," 1904]Derogatory meaning "black person" is 1928, from the color of the playing card symbol.