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trickily

/trik-ee/US // ˈtrɪk i //UK // (ˈtrɪkɪ) //

巧妙地,狡猾地,诡异地,诡计多端地

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1

    trick·i·er, trick·i·est.

    • : given to or characterized by deceitful tricks; crafty; wily.
    • : skilled in clever tricks or dodges.
    • : deceptive, uncertain, or difficult to deal with or handle.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • When the ad shifts to Hunter Biden, it makes another tricky maneuver.

  • By design, comparing the performance of RSAs to ETAs is tricky because they are two different animals.

  • Below are a range of options to tackle the trickiest of scalp problems.

  • Even so, some say that navigating the talk can be tricky especially when doing so with a client.

  • We opened that up nationwide for free to the entire country because we knew navigating a relationship and dating in this environment was tricky.

  • The digital dating sphere can prove tricky, and bruising, for the trans user.

  • Their solidified friendship is one of the most touching details of the premiere, but it also puts Branson in a tricky predicament.

  • The power delivered by the rocket motor was uneven and tricky to control.

  • It is a tricky and perilous path, but there are no realistic alternatives.

  • What makes Islam so tricky that it trips up even the usually more discerning among us?

  • The English have too much pride to be tricky or shabby, even in the essentially corrupting relation of buyer and seller.

  • A man's mind is a tricky thing—or, speaking more exactly, a man's emotions are tricky things.

  • He was concerned with the villainous intrigues of Cerizet, his copy-clerk, and with Theodose de la Peyrade, the tricky lawyer.

  • The thing, as he had said, was tricky; it came and went; and the fear of losing it was the most overpowering of all fears.

  • You may have married a healthy animal, but animals are tricky and uncertain.