-
1 (сокр . от confidence game) мошенничество
Colloquial: con game, con jobУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > (сокр . от confidence game) мошенничество
-
2 злоупотребление доверием
1) General subject: betrayal of trust, breach of faith, con game, confidence job, confidence trick, malpractice2) Colloquial: con art, con job, con-art, confidence fraud3) Law: abuse of confidence, breach of trust, confidence game, misuse of confidence, violation of trust, abuse of trust4) Business: breach of confidence, confidenceУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > злоупотребление доверием
-
3 мошенничество
1) General subject: a piece of deceit, chouse, come-on game, con game, con trick, confidence job, confidence trick, cooch, cootch, cozenage, defraudation, dodgery, fakement, flimflam, flop, fraud, fraudulence, gammon, graft, grift, gyp, hankey pankey, hanky panky, hanky-panky, imposing, imposture, imposure, jugglery, knavery, monkey business, numbers game, obreption, piece of deception, racketeering, rascality, rip-off, roguery, sham, sharp practice, sharp practices, shell game, skin game, swindle, swiz, swizzle, cheat, racket, skin-game, stand the racket, roguishness, jiggery-pokery, hocus-pocus, skulduggery2) Colloquial: con, (сокр. от confidence game) con game, (сокр. от confidence game) con job, con trick (сокр. от confidence trick), (сокр. от confidence trick) conn, do, fiddle (мелкое), hankey-pankey, hustle, swizz3) American: gip4) French: legerdemain5) Obsolete: ropery6) Latin: dolus7) Law: bunco, cheating, confidence game, deceitful practices, deceptive practices, dishonesty, false pretences, fraudulent conversation, fraudulent conversion, fraudulent practices, larceny by trick, obtaining property by false pretences, pettifoggery, pettifogging, ruse, swindling8) Economy: holding-out, sharp entrepot9) Diplomatic term: deception10) Scottish language: brogue11) Jargon: funny business, ramp, razzle-dazzle, scam, shave, dodge, ripoff12) Simple: bamboozle13) Advertising: chiz biz, fraudulent practice14) Patents: deceit, trafficking15) Business: confidence, fake, fraudulent activities, imposition16) leg.N.P. cheating by false pretenses17) Makarov: numbers pool, numbers rackets, plant18) Taboo: pisseroo, shitty deal19) Security: rogue act -
4 обман
1) General subject: bilk, blind, bluff, bob, cajolement (с помощью лести), cajolery (с помощью лести), cheat, chicanery, chouse, circumvention, cog, con game, cozenage, craft, cram, deceit (to practise deceit - хитрить, обманывать), deception, defraudation, delusion, disguise, dishonesty, dissimulation, double dealing, double face, double-dealing, dupery, fakement, false pretences, falsehood, foul play, fraud, fraudulence, gammon, gloze, gouge, guile, gyp, hankey pankey, hanky panky, hanky-panky, have on, have-on, hoax, hoax (ффф), hokum, humbug, humbuggery, hype, imposing, imposition, imposture, imposure, indirection, intake, jockeying, juggle, jugglery, knavery, letdown, lie, lurk, monkey business, overreach, phony, porkies ("рифмованный слэнг" кокни, pork pies = porkies = lie = lies), porky, pretence, pretense, racket, sham, shave, shenanigan, spoofery, swindle, take-in, trick, trickery, victimization, wile, wiles, windy, stand the racket, shell game, beguilement, skulduggery2) Colloquial: breach of faith, breach of trust, con art, con-art, confidence fraud, confidence job, confidence trick, do, dodge, double-cross, hankey-pankey, (сущ.) have, haves, hum, phoney, sell, skin-game, spoof, swizz, set-up (a dishonest plan that tricks you - LONGMAN), fakeness4) American: bunco, shucking and jiving, steal6) Latin: dolus (римское право)8) Law: artifice, false pretence, false pretenses, false representation, fraudulent behavior, fraudulent conduct, fraudulent misrepresentation, fraudulent pretence, fraudulent representation, ruse, wilful misrepresentation, willful misrepresentation9) Economy: defrauding, eyewash, goldbrick, gouging, holding-out, swindling10) Accounting: twist12) Diplomatic term: equivocation, let-down13) Scottish language: brogue14) Jargon: bam, bung, bunko, burn, claptrap, crock, dipsy-doodle, fast one, fiddle, flimflam, fluke, funny business, gag, gil, gip, hocus-pokus, jiggery pokery, jip, kid, pinch, put on, rip-off, ripoff, scam, screwup, snip, squib, string, Brodie, borax, bug, chaw, flivver, foney, fony, put-up Job, raspberry, razz-ma-tazz, razzamatazz, razzberry, razzle-dazzle, razzmatazz, wire15) Simple: bamboozle16) Food industry: flaming17) Advertising: fraudulent behaviour, misrepresentation18) Business: con, con trick, fraudulent practices19) leg.N.P. fraud (law of contracts)20) Makarov: act of dishonesty, gold brick, illusion, plant21) Archaic: fub22) Taboo: hell's delight23) Security: bamboozlement, cheating -
5 разводилово
Colloquial: breach of faith, breach of trust, con art, con game, con-art, confidence fraud, confidence job, confidence trick -
6 разводка
Colloquial: breach of faith, breach of trust, con art, con game, con-art, confidence fraud, confidence job, confidence trick -
7 надувательство
1) General subject: chicanery, chouse, cozenage, defraudation, doping, dupery, fiddle, flimflam, gammon, gouge, gyp, hoax, hocus pocus, hocus-pocus, humbug, hype, imposture, legerdemain, monkey business, scam, shenanigans, swindle, take in, take-in, trickery, victimization, raw deal, sham2) Colloquial: breach of faith, breach of trust, chisel, con art, con game, con-art, confidence fraud, confidence job, confidence trick, do, (сущ.) have, haves, hum, kid, sell, rip-off, twist3) American: gip, skulduggery, skullduggery4) Law: swindling5) Economy: goldbrick, gouging, sharp practice6) Jargon: bam, burn, hanky panky, hocus-pokus, spoof8) Makarov: gold brick, plant9) Taboo: swizz10) Security: trick -
8 разводка
Colloquial: breach of faith, breach of trust, con art, con game, con-art, confidence fraud, confidence job, confidence trick -
9 доверять
нсв viон мне по́лностью доверя́ет — he took me into his full confidence
2) (св дове́рить) поручать to entrust; to trustдоверя́ть что-л кому-л — to commit sth to sb's trust
ему́ мо́жно дове́рить э́ту рабо́ту — you can trust him to do the job properly
дове́рить кому-л та́йну — to confide/to entrust a secret to sb
я дове́рил ему́ де́ньги — I entrusted the money to him/him with the money
-
10 П-456
ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ (ЗЕМЛЮ) ПОД НОГАМИ (ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ) VP subj. human) to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. etc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc)X потерял почву под ногами = the ground slipped (out) from (gave way) beneath X's feetX felt the ground slipping (out) from (giving way) beneath his feet X felt the ground slipping (out) from under his feet X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что... необходимость оставления М'Ч' l'i,f бет всякого героического эффекта iaci ала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a) -
11 потерять землю из-под ног
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > потерять землю из-под ног
-
12 потерять землю под ногами
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > потерять землю под ногами
-
13 потерять землю под собой
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > потерять землю под собой
-
14 потерять почву из-под ног
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > потерять почву из-под ног
-
15 потерять почву под ногами
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > потерять почву под ногами
-
16 потерять почву под собой
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > потерять почву под собой
-
17 терять землю из-под ног
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > терять землю из-под ног
-
18 терять землю под ногами
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > терять землю под ногами
-
19 терять землю под собой
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > терять землю под собой
-
20 терять почву из-под ног
• ТЕРЯТЬ/ПОТЕРЯТЬ ПОЧВУ < ЗЕМЛЮ> ПОД НОГАМИ <ИЗ-ПОД НОГ, ПОД СОБОЙ>[VP; subj. human]=====⇒ to lose one's sense of security, lose confidence in o.s. ctc (often as a result of having lost one's social position, job etc):- X felt the ground slipping away (from) under him (his feet).♦ Красивая роль руководителя народного чувства так понравилась Расгопчину, он так сжился с нею, что необходимость оставления Москвы без всякого героического эффекта качала его врасплох, и он вдруг погерял из-под ног почву, на которой стоял, и решительно не знал, что ему делать (Толстой 6). The illustrious role of leader of popular feeling so delighted Rostopchin, and he had grown so accustomed to it, that the necessity of surrendering Moscow with no heroic display of any kind took him unawares, and he suddenly felt the ground slipping away from under him and was utterly at a loss to know what to do (6a)Большой русско-английский фразеологический словарь > терять почву из-под ног
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
Confidence Man (Lost) — Confidence Man Lost episode Sawyer considers burning the letter he wrote in 1979. Episode no … Wikipedia
Confidence-based learning — or CBL is a methodology used in learning and training that measures a learner s knowledge quality by determining both the correctness of the learner s knowledge and confidence in that knowledge. Additionally, the CBL process is designed to… … Wikipedia
Job — • One of the books of the Old Testament, and the chief personage in it Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Job Job † … Catholic encyclopedia
JOB, BOOK OF — (named for its hero (Heb. אִיּוֹב), ancient South Arabian and Thamudic yʾb; Old Babylonian Ayyābum, Tell el Amarna tablet, no. 256, line 6, A ia ab; either from yʾb, to bear ill will or compounded of ay where? and ʾab (divine) father ), one of… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
job — [ dʒab ] noun *** ▸ 1 work to earn money ▸ 2 particular piece of work ▸ 3 duty ▸ 4 a crime ▸ 5 something of particular type ▸ 6 something computer etc. does ▸ + PHRASES 1. ) count work that you do regularly to earn money. When you ask someone… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
confidence — noun 1 belief in others ADJECTIVE ▪ absolute, complete, full, total ▪ The company needs the full confidence of its investors. ▪ great, high … Collocations dictionary
confidence — con|fi|dence W2S2 [ˈkɔnfıdəns US ˈka:n ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(feeling somebody/something is good)¦ 2¦(belief in yourself)¦ 3¦(feeling something is true)¦ 4 gain/win/earn somebody s confidence 5¦(keep information secret)¦ 6 take somebody into your… … Dictionary of contemporary English
Confidence trick — Con games redirects here. For the film, see Con Games (film). Scam redirects here. For other uses, see Scam (disambiguation). For the short story by John Wyndham, see Jizzle. A confidence trick is an attempt to defraud a person or group by… … Wikipedia
confidence — con|fi|dence [ kanfıdəns ] noun *** 1. ) uncount the belief that you are able to do things well: give someone confidence: Motherhood gave her confidence. gain/lose confidence: The more he fails, the more he loses confidence in his abilities. lack … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
confidence */*/*/ — UK [ˈkɒnfɪd(ə)ns] / US [ˈkɑnfɪdəns] noun Word forms confidence : singular confidence plural confidences 1) [uncountable] the belief that you are able to do things well have confidence: He s a nice boy, but he doesn t have much confidence.… … English dictionary
Confidence trick (tv and movies) — Fictional portrayals= Movies and television* The Lady Eve (1941) – directed by Preston Sturges; the main character, Jean Harrington (Barbara Stanwyck), is a con artist.1950s* Racket Squad (1951–1953) – TV series in the style of Dragnet with all… … Wikipedia