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pry
1[prahy]
verb (used without object)
to inquire impertinently or unnecessarily into something.
to pry into the personal affairs of others.
to look closely or curiously; peer; peep.
noun
plural
priesan impertinently inquisitive person.
an act of prying.
pry
2[prahy]
verb (used with object)
to move, raise, or open by leverage.
to get, separate, or ferret out with difficulty.
to pry a secret out of someone;
We finally pried them away from the TV.
noun
plural
priesa tool, as a crowbar, for raising, moving, or opening something by leverage.
the leverage exerted.
pry
1/ praɪ /
verb
to make an impertinent or uninvited inquiry (about a private matter, topic, etc)
noun
the act of prying
a person who pries
pry
2/ praɪ /
verb
to force open by levering
to extract or obtain with difficulty
they had to pry the news out of him
Word History and Origins
Origin of pry1
Word History and Origins
Origin of pry1
Origin of pry2
Example Sentences
How leading Democrats address these two significant challenges will determine whether they can pry back control of Congress, state legislatures and even the White House.
She didn’t want to pry, she said, but what exactly happened?
She posted images of city workers prying out the two figures from the bench and the bronzed Castro and Guevara being ignominiously hauled away in a bulldozer.
Secreted inside the technobabble dust jacket was a Polish-language copy of George Orwell’s “1984,” the boring cover a deliberate misdirection to deter prying eyes.
But that is only initial assessment and labelled as "low confidence" – the tag comes because it is early days in trying to understand what happened at a place which is deliberately hidden from prying eyes.
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