ruse 的定义
- a trick, stratagem, or artifice.
ruse 近义词
trick, deception
更多ruse例句
- His 40-year ruse unraveled as police pieced together anonymous tips, finally stumbling across the news of Lafferty’s second, officially verified death.
- Amy’s ensuing ordeal, however, also underlines the difficulty of maintaining such a ruse in a world where everyone has access to the same tools, knows the same tricks, and is able to make inquiries that put cons in jeopardy.
- Central government authorities were accused last year of tracking China’s oppressed Uighur minority in Xinjiang using DNA samples collected under the ruse of free health checks.
- The ruse worked and her attendance at the party went unreported.
- But the Beyoncé stage pictures are a ruse: they have an air of intimacy while telling us nothing of substance at all.
- Lyman admitted that his friends were skeptical about his motives but he denied suggestions that this was an elaborate ruse.
- Some consider this a continued furious response to the vaccine ruse perpetrated by the CIA in order to find Osama bin Laden.
- According to the indictment, however, it was all a clever ruse.
- The ruse by which he and Lannes captured the bridge below Vienna was discreditable no doubt from the point of view of morality.
- The motive of this harmless ruse was to bolster up Spanish prestige and thereby avoid bloodshed.
- The English, fearing a ruse, continued to stand to their arms till their scouts confirmed the mortifying intelligence.
- Another ruse to keep her mind engaged was to trace out our course with a stick on a patch of bare earth.
- It was but a ruse to hold his attention while savages up the slope and behind fallen timber drew a bead on him.