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 deceive [dɪ'siv]   添加此单词到默认生词本
vt. 欺骗, 行骗

vi. 欺骗, 行骗

[法] 欺骗, 欺诈, 行骗


  1. You are deceiving yourself if you still believe that she loves you.
    你如果还相信她爱你,你就是在欺骗自己。
  2. He deceived me into signing the papers.
    他骗我在文件上签了字。
  3. It's not honorable to deceive them.
    欺骗他们是不光彩的。


deceive


Deceive \De*ceive"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Deceived}; p. pr. &
vb. n. {Deceiving}.] [OE. deceveir, F. d['e]cevoir, fr. L.
decipere to catch, insnare, deceive; de- + capere to take,
catch. See {Capable}, and cf. {Deceit}, {Deception}.]
1. To lead into error; to cause to believe what is false, or
disbelieve what is true; to impose upon; to mislead; to
cheat; to disappoint; to delude; to insnare.

Evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse,
deceiving, and being deceived. --2 Tim. iii.
13.

Nimble jugglers that deceive the eye. --Shak.

What can 'scape the eye
Of God all-seeing, or deceive his heart? --Milton.

2. To beguile; to amuse, so as to divert the attention; to
while away; to take away as if by deception.

These occupations oftentimes deceived
The listless hour. --Wordsworth.

3. To deprive by fraud or stealth; to defraud. [Obs.]

Plant fruit trees in large borders, and set therein
fine flowers, but thin and sparingly, lest they
deceive the trees. --Bacon.

Syn: {Deceive}, {Delude}, {Mislead}.

Usage: Deceive is a general word applicable to any kind of
misrepresentation affecting faith or life. To delude,
primarily, is to make sport of, by deceiving, and is
accomplished by playing upon one's imagination or
credulity, as by exciting false hopes, causing him to
undertake or expect what is impracticable, and making
his failure ridiculous. It implies some infirmity of
judgment in the victim, and intention to deceive in
the deluder. But it is often used reflexively,
indicating that a person's own weakness has made him
the sport of others or of fortune; as, he deluded
himself with a belief that luck would always favor
him. To mislead is to lead, guide, or direct in a
wrong way, either willfully or ignorantly.

  1. Clark testified he never intended to deceive anyone with his expense filings.
  2. He also said she never plotted to deceive her husband into releasing the children to her.
  3. Sir, In his article (The Long View: 'When numbers deceive', September 24), Barry Riley expresses his concern at the obstacles in the way of measuring true performance.
  4. He said McBirney would show "he acted in the best interests of Sunbelt." "This case shows the great lengths to which people went to deceive regulators," U.S. Attorney Marvin Collins of Dallas told reporters in Washington.
  5. The government said it would check a complaint of the ABC-TV network that Israeli secret service agents posed as ABC employees to deceive a 17-year-old Palestinian, whom they arrested.
  6. This is what the Syrians wanted, to deceive the world and say the clashes have been among Lebanese factions," Aoun said in a televised interview.
  7. There is not a Marriott or a Ritz-Carlton in sight and the car park is packed with pickups and beaten-up saloons. Again, like the town and the resort centre, the mountain itself does not look much at first - but first appearances can deceive.
  8. Mr. Gharbonifar failed a polygraph test in January 1986, which indicated he might be acting under the control of Iran to deceive the U.S.
  9. And this second question has to be put: Was it necessary to deceive people like Messrs.
  10. Another controversy has developed over a column by an Italian Communist politician and poet, Pietro Ingrao, who said Montale had a "right to deceive," since capitalist society did not permit an artist to make a living from poetry.
  11. But if you try to deceive the authorities, it may be a fraud, and then you could be prosecuted by the penal authorities.
  12. But idealistic talk should not deceive; stabilizing exchange rates requires dependence and subordination, not the freedom for everybody to do their own thing.
  13. But U.S. District Judge Falcon Hawkins ruled Thursday that a Procter & Gamble patent for its super-absorbent diaper is unenforceable because the company intended to deceive a patent examiner.
  14. "It was simply a case of a greedy man who thought he could defraud and deceive the elderly," said Leah Kane, a bondholder who has organized a group of 200 at Leisure World, a giant retirement community outside Los Angeles.
  15. Mr. Pape, first secretary of the European Community delegation in Tokyo, is particularly ticked off about bottle labels he suspects are designed to deceive consumers into thinking they are buying imported spirits.
  16. "There was no plot to deceive any creditors.
  17. "It was a long-term scheme to deceive the company," said Thomas H. O'Mara, chairman and chief executive officer.
  18. "Though I tried to deceive myself as to the propriety of my actions, I knew in my heart it was wrong," Furmark said.
  19. However, the averages deceive: Mexico's inflows represented last year over 8.4 per cent of gross domestic product. There is another crucial difference.
  20. Still, while some companies no doubt blatantly deceive prospective employees, a more common problem, management specialists say, is the tendency of both applicants and interviewers to gloss over job descriptions.
  21. A pending measure would allow 15-year prison terms for those who coerce or deceive elderly people into giving up their money.
  22. The outright fraud made specifically to deceive is the rarest, she says, because it takes too much time and money to produce it and rarely would the anticipated price justify this kind of effort.
  23. George E. Clarke, a structural engineer for the Navy who has his own aviation consultancy in Lexington Park, Md., says testing may deceive.
  24. The plaintiffs claimed that between 1983 and 1989, Mr Guerin, executive chairman of ISC and other persons, conspired to commit fraud falsely to inflate ISC's profits and deceive Ferranti.
  25. At Lagos airport customs officials try to extort money, and touts deceive, abduct and rob visitors on arrival. Bureaucratic corruption pervadesall levels.
  26. The court would also have to decide whether Mr. Simon had acted inadvertently or "recklessly or with intent to deceive."
  27. But it's important, Draper said, not to let the success shown by Grammy nominees deceive people into thinking total racial harmony has been achieved.
  28. In response, Paramount counterclaimed on Thursday that Time had made "misleading statements and material omissions designed to deceive Time stockholders" in its offer for Warner.
  29. Prosecutor Casey O'Brien dismissed Mountain's claim that he did not intend to deceive anyone.
  30. The defensive avionics, or electronic countermeasures system, was designed to improve the bomber's probability of penetrating the Soviet Union by allowing the aircraft's crew to "avoid, degrade and deceive the Soviet air defenses," the report said.
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