verb Street Slang

case

KAYSS · verb · slang

To scout a target before robbing it.

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Definitions

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To case a place (or 'case the joint') is to survey and study a target, noting security, layout, and routines, in preparation for a robbery.

“They spent a week casing the jewelry store before the break-in.”
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case In A Sentence

They spent a week casing the jewelry store before the break-in.

Origin & Usage

American underworld slang, early 20th century.

Variants casingcased

People Also Ask

What does it mean to 'case' a place?

To case a place is to survey and study a target, noting its security, layout, and routines, in preparation for a robbery.

What does 'case the joint' mean?

It means to scout out a location before robbing it, checking how to get in, get out, and avoid detection.

Where does this sense of 'case' come from?

It is early 20th-century American underworld slang.

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