spy

noun
/spaɪ/

Etymology

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)).

  1. derived from *speḱ-
  2. derived from *spehōną
  3. derived from *spehōn
  4. derived from espier
  5. inherited from spien

Definitions

  1. A person who secretly watches and examines the actions of other individuals or…

    A person who secretly watches and examines the actions of other individuals or organizations and gathers information on them (usually to gain an advantage).

    • 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.
  2. A defensive player assigned to cover an offensive backfield player man-to-man when they…

    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.

  3. To act as a spy.

    • During the Cold War, Russia and America would each spy on each other for recon.
  4. + 3 more definitions
    1. To spot

      To spot; to catch sight of; to espy.

      • I think I can spy that hot guy coming over here.
      • VVherefore lift up your heads, brethren, and look about vvith your eyes, ſpy vvhat things are to be reformed in the Church of England.
      • One in reading, skipped over all sentences where he spied a note of admiration.
    2. To search narrowly

      To search narrowly; to scrutinize.

      • (As I confeſſe it is my Natures plague / To ſpy into Abuſes, and of my iealouſie / Shapes faults that are not)
    3. To explore

      To explore; to see; to view; inspect and examine secretly, as a country.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for spy. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA