0 past simple and past participle of swipe
1 to hit or try to hit something, especially with a sideways movement:
2 to steal:
Okay, who swiped my keys?
3 to move a card containing information stored on a magnetic strip through a device that reads this information
I have been lobbying harder for something else: for the money not to be swiped at all.
We "swiped" nearly all the sub-standard houses in our district through demolition orders, and built houses which are highly desirable dwellings to-day.
Nobody had swiped it exactly, but something had gone out of the noble day.
However, the immigration service cannot have a system whereby people entering the country can be swiped in, nor one that swipes them out when they leave.
If the enemy is defeated, the enemy card is discarded and the next enemy card is swiped in.
He had 1755 hits, resulting in a.296 batting average, and was a prolific base stealer who swiped 473 bases during his career.
The paper badge can be swiped through the turnstile readers like a regular access control card.
The gondola was protected, but most of the logs and charts were swiped by souvenir hunters.