Citations:eavesread

Verb: "to surreptitiously read somehting"

 * 1998, Larry Samuel, The Future Ain't what it Used to be: 40 Cultural Trends Transforming Your Job, Your Life, Your World, Riverhead Books (1998), ISBN 9781573220804, page 99:
 * Lurkers hang around silently in otherwise noisy chat rooms, eavesreading other people's conversations for vicarious fun.
 * 2011, Caissie St. Onge, Jane Jones: Worst. Vampire. Ever., Ember (2011), ISBN 9780375868917, page 27:
 * Once, my mom flipped out when she eavesread an exchange between us over my shoulder.
 * 2012, Seth Rudetsky, My Awesome/Awful Popularity Plan, Random House Children's Books (2012), ISBN 9780375869150, page 33:
 * I decided to eavesdrop. Hmm . . . eavesread?
 * 2013, David G. Clark, book review, Sehnsucht: The C. S. Lewis Journal, Volume 7/8, 2013-2014, page 189:
 * Who can resist eavesdropping, er, eavesreading (?) into a correspondence that reveals “classified” plans and techniques that devils are using... on us!
 * 2013, Rainbow Rowell, Eleanor & Park, St. Martin's Press (2013), ISBN 9781250012579, page 39:
 * He was holding a comic called Watchmen, and it looked so ugly that Eleanor decided not to bother eavesdropping. Or eavesreading. Whatever.
 * 2014, Hank Phillippi Ryan, Truth Be Told, Forge (2014), ISBN 9780765374974, page 94:
 * Aaron yanked at his tie to keep it from strangling him, tried to “eavesread” the paperwork on Stephanie's desk to find any clues to Lizzie's whereabouts.