deceive
柯林斯词典
1. V-T If you deceive someone, you make them believe something that is not true, usually in order to get some advantage for yourself. 欺騙
He has deceived and disillusioned us all. 他欺騙了我們所有人, 令我們所有人失望至極。
2. V-T If something deceives you, it gives you a wrong impression and makes you believe something that is not true. 誤導
Do not be deceived by claims on food labels like "light" or "low fat."
不要被食品標簽上像“少脂”或“低脂”的字樣誤導。
返回 deceive
deceive /dɪˈsiːv/ (deceiving,deceived,deceives)
剑桥词典
- to persuade someone that something false is the truth , or to keep the truth hidden from someone for your own advantage
- Anyway, I can't deceive him - it's against all my principles .
- He repudiated the allegation that he had tried to deceive them.
- I suspect these statistics flatter to deceive.
- What really angered her was the dirty underhand way they had deceived her.
- They deceived us into thinking they would come back later with our money .
欺騙,矇騙;隱瞞
The company deceived customers by selling old computers as new ones . 該公司用舊計算機冒充新機器欺騙顧客。
The sound of the door closing deceived me into thinking they had gone out. 關門聲讓我以爲他們已經出門了。
同義詞
trick verb
deceive yourself
to refuse to accept the truth
自欺欺人,欺騙自己
She thinks he'll come back, but she's deceiving herself. 她認爲他會廻來,實際上她是在自欺欺人。
例句
deceiver
noun [ 可數名詞:有複數形式的名詞 ] ukYour browser doesn't support HTML5 audio
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someone who deceives people
騙子