spy - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: spý
spy
From Middle English spien, aphetic variant of earlier espien (“to espy”), from Old French espier (“to spy”), from Frankish *spehōn (“to spy”), from Proto-Germanic *spehōną (“to see, look”), from Proto-Indo-European *speḱ- (“to look”). Akin to German spähen (“to spy”), Dutch spieden (“to spy”).
The noun displaced native Old English sċēawere (literally “watcher”), which was also the word for "mirror." In this sense, the verb displaced Old English sċēawian, which was also the word for "to watch" and became the Modern English word show.
Distant cognate vie PIE with Latin speculātor, Ancient Greek κατάσκοπος (katáskopos).
Compare typologically Russian согляда́тай (sogljadátaj) (akin to гляде́ть (gljadétʹ)).
spy (plural spies)
- A person who secretly watches and examines the actions of other individuals or organizations and gathers information on them (usually to gain an advantage).
Synonyms: (obsolete) espy, intelligencer; see also Thesaurus:spy- 1941, Theodore Roethke, “Feud”, in Open House, New York, N.Y.: Alfred A[braham] Knopf, →OCLC; republished in The Collected Poems of Theodore Roethke, London: Faber and Faber […], 1968, →OCLC, page 4:
The dead leap at the throat, destroy
The meaning of the day; dark forms
Have scaled your walls, and spies betray
Old secrets to amorphous swarms. - 2013 June 29, “Travels and travails”, in The Economist, volume 407, number 8842, page 55:
Even without hovering drones, a lurking assassin, a thumping score and a denouement, the real-life story of Edward Snowden, a rogue spy on the run, could be straight out of the cinema. But, as with Hollywood, the subplots and exotic locations may distract from the real message: America’s discomfort and its foes’ glee.
- 1941, Theodore Roethke, “Feud”, in Open House, New York, N.Y.: Alfred A[braham] Knopf, →OCLC; republished in The Collected Poems of Theodore Roethke, London: Faber and Faber […], 1968, →OCLC, page 4:
- (American football) A defensive player assigned to cover an offensive backfield player man-to-man when they are expected to engage in a running play, but the offensive player does not run with the ball immediately.
- antispy
- bespy
- co-spy
- counterspy
- cyberspy
- Eurospy
- spyboat
- spybot
- spycam
- spycatcher
- spycatching
- spy cop
- spycore
- spycraft
- spydom
- spy dust
- spyess
- spy-fi
- Spygate
- spyhole
- spy-hop
- spy-hopping
- spyism
- spyless
- spylike
- spymaster
- spymistress
- spy money
- spyplane
- spyproof
- spy ring
- spy satellite
- spyship
- spywork
- superspy
person who secretly watches
- Abkhaz: аԥшы́хәҩы (apŝə́xʷjʷə), а́шьклаԥшҩы (áškʼlapŝjʷə), ашпион (aŝpʼjon)
- Afrikaans: spioen
- Albanian: përgjues (sq) m,
- Arabic: جَاسُوس m (jāsūs)
Andalusian Arabic: دَيْسُوس (daysūs)
South Levantine Arabic: جَاسُوس (jāsūs) - Aramaic: גשושא m (/gāšōšā/)
Assyrian Neo-Aramaic: ܓܵܫܘܿܫܵܐ (gāšōšā)
Classical Syriac: ܓܫܘܫܐ m (/gāšōšā/)
Imperial Aramaic: 𐡂𐡅𐡔𐡊𐡀 (gwškʾ /gōšakā/) - Armenian: լրտես (hy) (lrtes)
Old Armenian: գուշակ (gušak) - Assamese: চোৰাংচোৱা (süraṅsüa)
- Avar: жасус (žasus)
- Azerbaijani: casus (az)
- Basque: espioi
- Belarusian: шпіён m (špijón), шпег m (špjeh) (colloquial), шпік m (špik) (colloquial), шпіёнка f (špijónka)
- Bengali: গুপ্তচর (bn) (guptocor), গুপ্তচর (bn) (guptôcôr)
- Bulgarian: шпио́нин (bg) m (špiónin), шпио́нка (bg) f (špiónka)
- Burmese: သူလျှို (suhlyui)
- Catalan: espia (ca) f
- Chechen: шпион (špion)
- Chinese:
Cantonese: 間諜 / 间谍 (gaan3 dip6)
Hokkien: 間諜 / 间谍 (kàn-tia̍p)
Mandarin: 間諜 / 间谍 (zh) (jiàndié) - Czech: vyzvědač m, vyzvědačka f, špión (cs) m, špiónka f, špeh m
- Danish: spion c
- Dhivehi: ޖާސޫސް (jāsūs)
- Dutch: spion (nl) m, spionne (nl) f
- Esperanto: spiono (eo)
- Estonian: spioon
- Faroese: njósnari m
- Finnish: vakooja (fi), vakoilija (fi)
- French: espion (fr) m, espionne (fr) f
- Galician: espía (gl) m or f
- Georgian: ჯაშუში (ka) (ǯašuši), შპიონი (šṗioni), მოთვალთვალე (motvaltvale), მსტოვარი (msṭovari)
- German: Spion (de) m, Spionin (de) f, Spitzel (de) m (colloquial), Schlapphut (de) m (colloquial), Schnüffler (de) m (colloquial)
- Ghomala': bâ class 1
- Gothic: 𐍆𐌴𐍂𐌾𐌰 m (fērja)
- Greek: κατάσκοπος (el) m (katáskopos)
Ancient Greek: κατάσκοπος m (katáskopos) - Gujarati: જાસૂસ (jāsūs)
- Hebrew: מְרַגֵל (he) m (meragel), מרגלת f (meragelet)
- Hindi: जासूस (hi) m (jāsūs), गुप्तचर (hi) m (guptacar)
- Hungarian: kém (hu), kémnő (hu), spion (hu)
- Icelandic: njósnari (is) m
- Indonesian: mata-mata (id)
- Irish: spiaire m, brathadóir m
- Italian: spia (it) f
- Japanese: 密偵 (ja) (みってい, mittei), 探偵 (ja) (たんてい, tantei), 諜報員 (ja) (ちょうほういん, chouhōin), スパイ (ja) (supai), 間諜 (ja) (かんちょう, kanchō), 密使 (ja) (みっし, misshi), 回し者 (mawashimono), 忍びの者 (shinobi no mono), 忍び (ja) (shinobi), 忍者 (ja) (ninja)
- Kazakh: шпион (şpion), тыңшы (tyñşy)
- Khmer: ចារបុរស (caaraʼborɑh)
- Korean: 간첩(間諜) (ko) (gancheop), 스파이 (ko) (seupai), 밀정(密偵) (ko) (miljeong)
- Kurdish:
Northern Kurdish: sîxur (ku), casûs (ku), diznêr (ku), xefnêr (ku), şofar (ku), spiyon (ku) - Kyrgyz: шпион (ky) (şpion), тыңчы (ky) (tıŋcı)
- Lak: ясус (aˤsus)
- Lao: ໃສ້ເສິກ (sai sœk), ເຊີຽ (sœ̄i), ຈາລະບຸລຸດ (chā la bu lut), ນັກສືບ (nak sư̄p)
- Latin: speculātor m, speculātrix f; ēmissārius m, ōtacustēs m
- Latvian: spiegs m, spiedze f
- Lithuanian: šnipas m, šnipė f
- Macedonian: шпион m (špion), шпионка f (špionka)
- Malagasy: mitsikilo (mg)
- Malay: pengintip
- Malayalam: ചാരൻ (ml) (cāraṉ)
- Maltese: spjun m, spija
- Māori: tūtei, pūrahorua, kaitūtei, pūrahorua
- Marathi: हेर (her), गुप्तहेर (mr) m (guptaher)
- Mongolian:
Cyrillic: тагнуул (mn) (tagnuul), тагнуулч (mn) (tagnuulč) - Navajo: naalchiʼí
- Norman: êpieux m, espion m
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: spion m
Nynorsk: spion m - Occitan: espion (oc) m
- Odia: ଗୁପ୍ତଚର (or) (guptacara)
- Old English: sċēawere m
- Ossetian: шпион (špion), дзырдхӕссӕг (ʒyrdxæssæg)
- Pashto: جاسوس (ps) m (jāsús)
- Persian: ایشه (īše), گوش (fa) (gūš) (classic)
Dari: جَاسُوس (jāsūs)
Iranian Persian: جاسوس (fa) (jâsus) - Plautdietsch: Spiejoon m
- Polish: szpieg (pl) m, szpion (pl) m
- Portuguese: espião (pt) m
- Punjabi:
Gurmukhi: ਖਬਰਗੀਰ m (khabragīr), ਜਸੂਸ m (jasūs) - Romanian: spion (ro) m, spioană (ro) f
- Russian: шпио́н (ru) m (špión), шпио́нка (ru) f (špiónka), аге́нт (ru) m (agént), шпик (ru) m (špik) (colloquial)
- Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: шпѝјӯн m, шпѝјӯнка f, у̀хода m
Latin: špìjūn (sh) m, špìjūnka (sh) f, ùhoda (sh) m - Slovak: špión m, špiónka f, špeh m, vyzvedač m, vyzvedačka f, zved m, sliedič m, sliedička f
- Slovene: vohun (sl) m, vohunka f
- Sotho: tlhwela
- Spanish: espía (es) m, chivato (es) m
- Swahili: jasusi (sw) class 5/6, mpelelezi (sw) class 1/2
- Swedish: spion (sv) c, kunskapare (sv) c
- Tabasaran: жасус (žasus)
- Tagalog: batyaw
- Tajik: ҷосус (josus), шпион (špion)
- Tatar: шпион (şpiyon)
- Telugu: వేగు (te) (vēgu), గూఢచారి (te) (gūḍhacāri)
- Thai: สายลับ (th) (sǎai-láp)
- Tibetan: སོ་པ (so pa)
- Tocharian B: pälkostau
- Turkish: ajan (tr), casus (tr), çaşıt (tr)
- Turkmen: içaly
- Tuvan: шивишкин (şivişkin)
- Ukrainian: шпигу́н m (špyhún), шпигу́нка f (špyhúnka), шпиг m (špyh) (colloquial), шпик m (špyk) (colloquial)
- Urdu: جاسُوس m (jāsūs)
- Uyghur: جاسۇس (jasus), ئىشپىيون (ishpiyon)
- Uzbek: josus (uz), shpion (uz)
- Vietnamese: gián điệp (vi) (間諜)
- Volapük: (♂♀) spionan (vo), (♂) hispionan, (♀) jispionan
- Welsh: ysbïwr m, ysbïwraig f
- Woiwurrung: merrtt
- Yakut: үспүйүөн (üspüyüön)
- Yiddish: שפּיאָן m (shpyon)
- Zazaki: casus (♂♀)
spy (third-person singular simple present spies, present participle spying, simple past and past participle spied)
- (intransitive) To act as a spy.
During the Cold War, Russia and America would each spy on each other for recon. - (transitive) To spot; to catch sight of; to espy.
I think I can spy that hot guy coming over here.- 1536 June 16 (Gregorian calendar), Hugh Latimer, “Sermon II. Master Latimer’s Discourse on the Same Day in the Afternoon [Preached to the Convocation of the Clergy, before the Parliament Began, the Sixth Day of June, the Twenty Eighth Year of the Reign of the Late King Henry VIII].”, in The Sermons of the Right Reverend Father in God, Master Hugh Latimer, Bishop of Worcester. […], volume I, London: […] J. Scott, […], published 1758, →OCLC, page 32:
VVherefore lift up your heads, brethren, and look about vvith your eyes, ſpy vvhat things are to be reformed in the Church of England. - 1918, Norman Lindsay, The Magic Pudding, page 68:
The next person they spied was a Bandicoot carrying a watermelon.
- 1536 June 16 (Gregorian calendar), Hugh Latimer, “Sermon II. Master Latimer’s Discourse on the Same Day in the Afternoon [Preached to the Convocation of the Clergy, before the Parliament Began, the Sixth Day of June, the Twenty Eighth Year of the Reign of the Late King Henry VIII].”, in The Sermons of the Right Reverend Father in God, Master Hugh Latimer, Bishop of Worcester. […], volume I, London: […] J. Scott, […], published 1758, →OCLC, page 32:
- (intransitive) To search narrowly; to scrutinize.
- c. 1603–1604 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Othello, the Moore of Venice”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene iii], page 324:
(As I confeſſe it is my Natures plague / To ſpy into Abuſes, and of my iealouſie / Shapes faults that are not)
- c. 1603–1604 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Othello, the Moore of Venice”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies […] (First Folio), London: […] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act III, scene iii], page 324:
- (transitive) To explore; to see; to view; inspect and examine secretly, as a country.
to act as a spy
- Afrikaans: spioeneer, bespied
- Albanian: përgjoj (sq)
- Arabic: تَجَسَّسَ (tajassasa)
- Armenian: լրտեսել (hy) (lrtesel)
- Bulgarian: шпионирам (bg) (špioniram)
- Catalan: espiar (ca)
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 暗中偵察 / 暗中侦察 (ànzhōng zhānchá) - Czech: špehovat, slídit (cs)
- Danish: spionere
- Dutch: spioneren (nl), bespieden (nl)
- Esperanto: spioni (eo)
- Finnish: vakoilla (fi)
- French: espionner (fr)
- Galician: espiar (gl)
- Georgian: ჯაშუშობა (ǯašušoba), შპიონაჟი (šṗionaži), თვალთვალი (tvaltvali), დაზვერვა (dazverva), მიკვლევა (miḳvleva), კვალის მიგნება (ḳvalis migneba)
- German: ausspionieren (de)
- Greek: κατασκοπεύω (el) (kataskopévo)
Ancient Greek: κατασκοπέω (kataskopéō) - Greenlandic: marserpoq, marserpaa
- Hungarian: kémkedik (hu)
- Icelandic: njósna
- Indonesian: memata-matai
- Italian: spiare (it)
- Latin: speculor
- Latvian: spiegot
- Macedonian: шпиони́ра (špioníra)
- Malay: intip
- Māori: tūtei
- Marathi: हेरगिरी करणे (hergirī karṇe)
- Norwegian: spionere
- Occitan: espionar (oc)
- Polish: szpiegować (pl)
- Portuguese: espiar (pt), espionar (pt)
- Quechua: chapatiyay
- Romanian: spiona (ro)
- Russian: шпио́нить (ru) (špiónitʹ), следи́ть (ru) (sledítʹ)
- Serbo-Croatian: шпијунирати, уходити
Latin: špijunírati (sh), uhòditi (sh) - Slovene: vohuniti (sl) impf
- Sotho: hlwela
- Spanish: espiar (es)
- Swahili: majasusi (sw)
- Swedish: spionera (sv), kunskapa
- Turkish: casusluk yapmak, ajanlık yapmak
- Tuvan: шивишкиннээр (şivişkinneer)
- Ukrainian: шпигувати (uk) impf (špyhuvaty)
- Volapük: spionön (vo)
- Welsh: ysbïo (cy)
- Zazaki: casusin
to spot at a distance
Afrikaans: bespied
Bulgarian: съзирам (bg) (sǎziram), забелязвам (bg) (zabeljazvam)
Danish: få øje på
Icelandic: koma auga á
Jamaican Creole: pree
Latin: speculor
Norwegian: få øye på
→ Japanese: スパイ (supai)
→ Korean: 스파이 (seupai)
From Old Norse spýja, from Proto-Germanic *spīwaną, from Proto-Indo-European *(s)ptyēw- (“to spit, vomit”). Compare Swedish and Norwegian Bokmål spy, Icelandic spýja, English spew, Dutch spuwen, German speien.
spy n (definite singular spyet) (uncountable)
spy (present tense spyr or spyer, simple past spyede, past participle spyet)
From Old Norse spýja, from Proto-Germanic *spīwaną, from Proto-Indo-European *(s)ptyēw- (“to spit, vomit”). Compare Swedish and Danish spy, Icelandic spýja, English spew, Dutch spuwen, German speien.
spy n (definite singular spyet) (uncountable)
spy (present tense spyr, simple past spydde, past participle spydd)
From Old Norse spýja. The noun is derived from the verb.
spy (present tense spyr, past tense spydde, past participle spytt/spydd, passive infinitive spyast, present participle spyande, imperative **spy)
- (ambitransitive) to vomit
- (intransitive, about blowflies) to lay eggs
spy n (definite singular spyet, uncountable)
- vomit, sick
- (collective) eggs of a blowfly
From Old Swedish spȳia, spȳa, spȳ, from Old Norse spýja, from Proto-Germanic *spīwaną, from Proto-Indo-European *(s)ptyēw- (“to spit, vomit”). Compare Norwegian and Danish spy, Icelandic spýja, English spew, Dutch spuwen, German speien.
spy (present spyr, preterite spydde, supine spytt, imperative **spy)
- to throw up, to puke, to vomit
Synonyms: kräkas, (slang) lägga en pizza- 2015, Mons Kallentoft, Vårlik[1], Bokförlaget Forum, →ISBN:
Hon känner magen dra sig samman och hon kastar sig åt sidan, spyr all galla ur magen och det känns oändligt skönt och hela hon är svett och en kylig fuktighet.
(please add an English translation of this quotation) - 2018, Rune Pär Olofsson, Tillsammans[2], Lindhardt og Ringhof, →ISBN:
När jag hör det, vill jag spy. För det är en dubbelmoral. Och jag har tvingats spy upp den — gång på gång.
(please add an English translation of this quotation) - 2019 December 19, Charlotta Lindgren, En hel jävla bok om cancer[3], Lindhardt og Ringhof, →ISBN:
Jag drabbades av järnbrist och förstoppning och jag spydde en hel del. I flera dagar var jag inlagd på lasarettet.
(please add an English translation of this quotation)
- 2015, Mons Kallentoft, Vårlik[1], Bokförlaget Forum, →ISBN:
- kaskadspy (“projectile vomit”)
- spy upp (“throw up”) (transitive)
- spyboll
- spyfärdig
- spypåse
- spya
- “spy”, in Svensk ordbok [Dictionary of Swedish] (in Swedish)
- “spy”, in Svenska Akademiens ordlista [Wordlist of the Swedish Academy] (in Swedish)
- “spy”, in Svenska Akademiens ordbok [Dictionary of the Swedish Academy] (in Swedish)
- pys