peep at (someone or something)
peep at (someone or something)
To get a quick, cursory, often sneaky or surreptitious look at someone or something. I peeped at the boss's computer, and it looks like there's a round of layoffs on the way. Campus guards caught him trying to peep at the women getting changed in their locker rooms.
See also: peep
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.
peep at someone or something
to get a glimpse of someone or something, as if looking through a hole. I peeped at Tom through the Venetian blinds. Look in the microscope and peep at this bacterium.
See also: peep
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.
- peep at
- peeps
- take a peek at (someone or something)
- peek
- peek at
- peek at (someone or something)
- stack the cards
- stack the cards (against someone or something)
- steal a march
- steal a march on (someone or something)