hoodwink

  • 21hoodwink — v. a. 1. Blind, blindfold. 2. Cover, hide, conceal, cloak. 3. Deceive, cheat, delude, dupe, gull, cozen, fool, befool, trick, circumvent, overreach, chouse, impose upon, make a fool of, play a trick upon, pull wool over one s eyes …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 22hoodwink — verb (transitive + into) to trick someone in a clever way so that you can get an advantage for yourself …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 23hoodwink — verb Jimmy was hoodwinked by his own brother Syn: deceive, trick, dupe, outwit, fool, delude, inveigle, cheat, take in, hoax, mislead, lead on, defraud, double cross, swindle, gull, scam; informal con, bamboozle …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 24hoodwink — v deceive, delude, bamboozle, pull the wool over [s.o. s] eyes, throw dust in [s.o. s] eyes, Inf. throw [s.o.] a curve; fool, Inf. fake [s.o.] out, take in, dupe, gull; trick, outwit, get the better of, pull a fast one on, Inf. slip or sneak one… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 25hoodwink — hood·wink …

    English syllables

  • 26hoodwink — hood•wink [[t]ˈhʊdˌwɪŋk[/t]] v. t. winked, wink•ing 1) to deceive or trick 2) archaic to blindfold 3) Obs. to cover or hide • Etymology: 1555–65; hood I+wink hood′wink a•ble, adj. hood′wink er, n …

    From formal English to slang

  • 27hoodwink — /ˈhʊdwɪŋk / (say hoodwingk) verb (t) 1. to deceive; humbug. 2. to blindfold. 3. to cover or hide. –hoodwinker, noun …

  • 28hoodwink — v.tr. deceive, delude. Etymology: orig. blindfold , f. HOOD(1) n. + WINK …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 29Bare-fronted Hoodwink — (Dissimulatrix spuria) Creature Grouping Legendary creature Sub grouping Bird Data First reported Bird Notes, 1950, in a scientific paper by Maury F.A. Meiklejohn Country All countr …

    Wikipedia

  • 30Saison 2 de Hero Corp — Série Hero Corp Pays d’origine  France Chaîne d’origine Comédie! Diffusion originale 8&# …

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