weasel out

Verb

 * 1)  To shirk, avoid, or fail to fulfill (a task, responsibility, etc.)
 * 2)  To obtain or extract, especially by cunning methods.
 * 3) * 1992 28 Sept., Stanley Reed, "Regarding Henry, Warily" (Book review of Kissinger by Walter Isaacson), Businessweek (retrieved 16 May 2011) :
 * In an effort to ingratiate himself with the 1968 Nixon campaign, Kissinger offered inside tips that he had weaseled out of friends privy to the Johnson Administration's talks with the North Vietnamese.
 * 1) * 1992 28 Sept., Stanley Reed, "Regarding Henry, Warily" (Book review of Kissinger by Walter Isaacson), Businessweek (retrieved 16 May 2011) :
 * In an effort to ingratiate himself with the 1968 Nixon campaign, Kissinger offered inside tips that he had weaseled out of friends privy to the Johnson Administration's talks with the North Vietnamese.

Translations

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 * Spanish: ,


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 * Polish:
 * Russian:
 * Spanish:, ,