cheat 的 3 个定义
- to defraud; swindle: He cheated her out of her inheritance.
- to deceive; influence by fraud: He cheated us into believing him a hero.
- to elude; deprive of something expected: He cheated the law by suicide.
- to practice fraud or deceit: She cheats without regrets.
- to violate rules or regulations: He cheats at cards.
- to take an examination or test in a dishonest way, as by improper access to answers.
- Informal. to be sexually unfaithful: Her husband knew she had been cheating all along. He cheated on his wife.
- a person who acts dishonestly, deceives, or defrauds: He is a cheat and a liar.
- a fraud; swindle; deception: The game was a cheat.
- Law. the fraudulent obtaining of another's property by a pretense or trick.
- an impostor: The man who passed as an earl was a cheat.
cheat 近义词
person who fools others
trick
cheat 的近义词 49 个
- chicanery
- deception
- fraud
- scam
- swindle
- trickery
- artifice
- baloney
- bunco
- con
- cozening
- deceit
- dodge
- double-dealing
- fake
- fix
- flimflam
- frame
- gyp
- hoax
- humbug
- hustle
- imposture
- jazz
- jive
- plant
- put-on
- racket
- rip-off
- sell
- sham
- spoof
- sting
- stunt
- whitewash
- wrong
- bamboozlement
- bill of goods
- con game
- cover up
- dirty pool
- dirty trick
- fast one
- fast shuffle
- hanky-panky
- run around
- shady deal
- shell game
- snow job
cheat 的反义词 7 个
defraud, fool
cheat 的近义词 49 个
- chicanery
- deception
- fraud
- scam
- swindle
- trickery
- artifice
- baloney
- bunco
- con
- cozening
- deceit
- dodge
- double-dealing
- fake
- fix
- flimflam
- frame
- gyp
- hoax
- humbug
- hustle
- imposture
- jazz
- jive
- plant
- put-on
- racket
- rip-off
- sell
- sham
- spoof
- sting
- stunt
- whitewash
- wrong
- bamboozlement
- bill of goods
- con game
- cover up
- dirty pool
- dirty trick
- fast one
- fast shuffle
- hanky-panky
- run around
- shady deal
- shell game
- snow job
cheat 的反义词 7 个
frustrate, thwart
更多cheat例句
- This comes in part from the fact that the Cullinan has a cheat sheet.
- They were salt-packed and full of “preservatives” and that ghastly enemy, MSG, but more than anything, they were the tools of cheats.
- “There should be a cheat sheet out there for what test to use when,” Wells said.
- For example, when you’re gearing up for a big promotional launch, create a cheat sheet of pre-written social copy and send over several variations that fit different channels.
- Using that formula, which is a bit of a cheat, e-commerce is now closer to 21%.
- Cheat, in other words—on God, on our fellow man, ultimately, on ourselves.
- If a Queen did cheat, her crimes fade into insignificance compared to the extensive philandering engaged in by medieval monarchs.
- Clients who are wary of online transactions are liable to see escorts with print ads as less likely to cheat or scam them.
- Vennare adds that cheat days can occasionally do more harm than good.
- And if so, is it possible to “cheat” without feeling the effects or seeing them on the scale?
- He turned to Miller, and said haughtily in his imperfect English, “Did you see the cheat, you?”
- And thirdly he knew that his adversary would cheat if he could and that his adversary suspected him of fraudulent designs.
- She had submitted to giving up the salmon, but the devil himself should not cheat her out of her dessert.
- I soon find out when they are trying to cheat me; then they come smirking and smiling with 'Guten Abis.'
- The tongue can't cheat the brain, and right now reading is out of the question.