0 to illegally enter a house etc to steal; burglarize American -- vyloupit, vloupat se
Our house has been burgled.
As several of the witnesses stated, he had burgled another man's house, although no witness revealed to the court which man's house it was.
Your house was burgled yesterday.
It transpired that there were only two little boys asleep: all the others had broken out and were burgling.
I speak from the experience of having been burgled no fewer than five times, but the police apprehended the villain in only one case.
I have heard stories about people who have been burgled for whom the burglary has been an experience of extreme anxiety and fright.
They have come back and kicked doors down, burgled homes, driven cars away, stolen car radios and so on.
All of us who have suffered burglaries know of the horror of being burgled.
She was afraid of a burglary, because she was going on holiday and had already been burgled once.