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Learn to pronounce de·ceive

/dəˈsēv/
verb
(of a person) cause (someone) to believe something that is not true, typically in order to gain some personal advantage.
"I didn't intend to deceive people into thinking it was French champagne"
synonyms: swindle, defraud, cheat, trick, hoodwink, hoax, dupe, take in, mislead, delude, fool, outwit, misguide, lead on, inveigle, seduce, ensnare, entrap, beguile, double-cross, gull, con, bamboozle, do, sting, diddle, rip off, shaft, bilk, rook, pull a fast one on, pull someone's leg, take for a ride, throw dust in someone's eyes, put one over on, take to the cleaners, fiddle, swizzle, sell a pup to, sucker, snooker, stiff, euchre, bunco, hornswoggle, pull a swifty on, cozen, sharp, mulct

People also ask
deceive, mislead, delude, beguile mean to lead astray or frustrate usually by underhandedness. deceive implies imposing a false idea or belief that causes ...
deceiveThe cigarette companies deceived the public about the health risks of cigarettes. · deceive yourselfYou'd be deceiving yourself if you believed that.
Deceive means to lie, mislead, or otherwise hide or distort the truth. The act or practice of deceiving can be called deceit or deception. Lying is only one way ...
deceive in American English ; 1. to mislead by a false appearance or statement; delude. They deceived the enemy by disguising the destroyer as a freighter ; 2. to ...
May 4, 2024 · /dɪˈsiv/ · deceivedeceiveddeceivingdeceivesdeceptiondeceptivedeceiverundeceive · the "deceive" family ...
deceive ; deceive /dɪ · verb ; deceives; deceived; deceiving ; deceives; deceived; deceiving.
Synonyms for DECEIVE: fool, trick, mislead, delude, tease, misinform, misguide, beguile; Antonyms of DECEIVE: undeceive, reveal, expose, uncover, show up, ...