English
Etymology
From smuggle + -er.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈsmʌɡ.lə(ɹ)/, /ˈsmʌɡ.əl.ə(ɹ)/
Noun
smuggler (plural smugglers)
- One who smuggles things.
1979, Italo Calvino, If on a Winter's Night a Traveler:Every time the little gate creaks--I'm in the shed with the tanks at the end of the garden--I wonder from which of my pasts the person is arriving, seeking me out even here: maybe it is only the past of yesterday and of this same suburb, the squat Arab garbage collector who in October begins his rounds for tips, house by house, with a Happy New Year card, because he says that his colleagues keep all the December tips for themselves and he never gets a penny; but it could also be the more distant pasts pursuing old Ruedi, finding the little gate in the Impasse: smugglers from Valais, mercenaries from Katanga, croupiers from the Veradero casino and the days of Fulgencio Batista.
2018, Paul French, City of Devils[1], Picador, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 118:Cabbage Moh, a Cantonese smuggler and drug dealer from triad-controlled Shumchun on the Hong Kong border, sees an opportunity to the north and opens dens supplying dope and philopon ferried up the Soochow Creek and distributed out of Fah Wah Village, adjacent to the new sin strip.
- A vessel employed in smuggling.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
One who smuggles things
- Albanian: kontrabandist (sq) m
- Arabic: مُهَرِّب m (muharrib)
- Armenian: մաքսանենգ (hy) (makʻsaneng)
- Azerbaijani: qaçaq, qaçaqçı
- Belarusian: кантрабанды́ст m (kantrabandýst), кантрабанды́стка f (kantrabandýstka)
- Bulgarian: контрабанди́ст m (kontrabandíst), контрабанди́стка f (kontrabandístka)
- Catalan: contrabandista (ca), passador (ca) m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 走私者 (zǒusīzhě), 走私販 / 走私贩 (zǒusīfàn), 走私犯 (zǒusīfàn)
- Czech: pašerák (cs) m, pašeračka f, podloudník m, podloudnice f
- Danish: smugler c
- Dutch: smokkelaar (nl) m
- Estonian: salakaubavedaja
- Finnish: salakuljettaja (fi)
- French: contrebandier (fr) m, contrebandière (fr) f
- Galician: contrabandista m or f
- Georgian: კონტრაბანდისტი (ḳonṭrabandisṭi)
- German: Schmuggler (de) m, Schmugglerin (de) f
- Greek: λαθρέμπορος (el) m (lathrémporos)
- Hebrew: מַברִיחַ m
- Hindi: तस्कर (hi) m (taskar)
- Hungarian: csempész (hu)
- Icelandic: smyglari m
- Indonesian: penyelundup (id)
- Italian: contrabbandiere (it) m
- Japanese: 密輸業者 (みつゆぎょうしゃ, mitsuyu gyōsha)
- Kazakh: контрабандашы (kontrabandaşy)
- Korean: 밀수범(密輸犯) (ko) (milsubeom), 밀수업자(密輸業者) (ko) (milsueopja)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: qaçax (ku), qaçaxçî (ku)
- Kyrgyz: контрабандист (kontrabandist), контрабандачы (kontrabandacı), аткезчи (ky) (atkezci)
- Latvian: kontrabandists m
- Lithuanian: kontrabandininkas m
- Macedonian: криумчар m (kriumčar), шверцер m (švercer)
- Malay: penyeludup
- Maori: kaikuhu tāhae, kaikawe tāhae, kaikawe toropuku
- Marathi: तस्कर m (taskar)
- Norman: fraudeux m
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: smugler (no) m
- Nynorsk: smuglar m
- Pashto: قاچاقچي m (qāčāqči), قاچاقبر m (qāčāqbar)
- Persian: قاچاقچی (fa) (qâčâqči)
- Polish: przemytnik (pl) m, przemytniczka (pl) f, szmugler (pl) m, szmuglerka (pl) f, kontrabandzista (pl) m, kontrabandzistka f
- Portuguese: contrabandista m or f
- Romanian: contrabandist (ro) m
- Russian: контрабанди́ст (ru) m (kontrabandíst), контрабанди́стка (ru) f (kontrabandístka)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: крѝјумча̄р m
- Roman: krìjumčār (sh) m
- Slovak: pašerák m, pašeračka f
- Slovene: tihotapec m, tihotapka f
- Spanish: contrabandista m
- Swedish: smugglare (sv) c
- Tagalog: mamumuslit
- Tajik: қочоқчӣ (qočoqči)
- Thai: ผู้ลักลอบ
- Turkish: kaçakçı (tr)
- Turkmen: kontrabandaçy, gaçakçy
- Ukrainian: контрабанди́ст m (kontrabandýst), контрабанди́стка f (kontrabandýstka)
- Uyghur: ئەتكەسچى (etkeschi)
- Uzbek: kontrabandist (uz), kontrabandachi
- Vietnamese: người buôn lậu
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a vessel employed in smuggling
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 走私船 (zǒusī chuán)
- Japanese: 密輸船 (みつゆせん, mitsuyusen)
- Korean: 밀수선(密輸船) (ko) (milsuseon)
- Norman: baté fraudeur m
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