0 to secretly tell someone in authority that someone else has done something bad, often in order to cause trouble: --
UK He snitched to my boss that I'd been making long-distance calls at work!
She thought I'd snitched on her.
1 to steal something: --
2 someone who secretly tells someone in authority that someone else has done something bad, often in order to cause trouble: --
People who cooperate with police are viewed by their neighbours as snitches.
You little snitch!
3 to secretly tell someone in authority that someone else has done something bad, often in order to cause trouble: --
4 to steal, or to take without permission: --
5 a person who secretly tells someone in authority that someone else has done something bad: --
Don’t be a snitch.
What will happen is that the lad with the curly locks will have a close hair shave and be out "snitching" handkerchiefs the moment he is released.
There is nothing wrong with that—it is not snitching; it is ensuring that the taxpayers' money is effectively spent and targeted at those who really need it.
They realize that they have a snitch in their own gang and that they can't get out of the country because the police will be looking for them.
Back at the mansion, tensions rise as a snitch is revealed among the men.
To end the game, you hit the tattler; tattler also being another name for a snitch.
If the score is tied after the snitch catch, the game proceeds into overtime.
He is an annoying snitch, mechanical genius, the school brainiac, and tattletale.
After the seeker floor the seekers are released and may run off pitch to search for the snitch.