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1 мошенник
1) General subject: angler, bad hat, bad lot, bilk, bilker, blackleg, charlatan, cheat, chevalier of fortune, chevalier of industry, chouse, con-man, confidence man, confidence trickster, cozener, deceiver, faker, fraud, grafter, greaser, greasers, gyp, hangdog, hawk, highbinder, highbinders, humbugger, impostor, jack-in-the-box, jacks, jacks-in-the-box, juggler, kite, knave, knight of the post, lurcher, magsman, picaroon, put-on artist, quack, quacksalver, racketeer, rascal, rogue, rook, scallywag, sham, shark, sharper, sharpy, son of a gun, spieler, swindler, tregetour, trepan, twicer, bad egg, fraud artist, flimflammer, con artist, flashman, flimflam artist, knight of industry, con, shady operator, scam artist3) Slang: conman5) Obsolete: cheater, gambler, rapscallion6) Law: fraudster, pettifogger, plunderer, sharker, trickster8) Australian slang: bushranger10) Simple: bamboozler11) Jail: hempseed12) Banking: defrauder13) Advertising: con man14) Business: gazumper15) Makarov: scallywag (особ. в политических делах), skinner (особ. шулер)16) Security: dishonest person -
2 обманщик
1) General subject: bluff, bluffer, charlatan, cheat, counterfeit, counterfeiter, cozener, crook, deceiver, delusionist, dissembler, double dealer, double-dealer, double-face, doubleface, duffer, faker, false, flimflamer, four flusher, four-flusher, fraud, gagger, gouge, hawk, heel, hoaxer, humbug, humbugger, impostor, jockey, juggler, mountebank, phoney, phony, pretender, pseud, quack, quacksalver, sham, shammer, sharper, shoddy character, slick, swindler, take in, take-in, tregetour, trepan, trickster, twicer, two timer, two-timer, victimizer, scammer (американизм), cheater, beguiler, yentzer5) Bookish: inveigler6) Law: confidence trickster7) Economy: double-cross, fraudster9) Scottish language: intake10) Jargon: bilk, chiseler, con man, crooked stick, designer, dipsy doodle, double-crosser, fiddler, four-flusher four-flushing, grifter, gyp artist, gypper, gypster, sell, worm, hoser, foney, fony, shark, sharpie11) Simple: bamboozler -
3 обманщик
cheat, deceiver, fraud, faker, trickster; impostor (выдающий себя за другого)* * ** * *cheat, deceiver, fraud, faker, trickster; impostor* * *bluffcounterfeitcounterfeitercozenerfakerfraudgougeimpostorintakejugglerphonytake-invictimizer
См. также в других словарях:
Cozener — Coz en*er (k?z n ?r), n. One who cheats or defrauds. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
cozener — noun see cozen … New Collegiate Dictionary
cozener — See cozen. * * * … Universalium
cozener — noun /ˈkʌzənə,ˈkʌznə/ An imposter, a swindler. See Also: cozen, cozenage … Wiktionary
cozener — (Roget s Thesaurus II) noun A person who cheats: bilk, cheat, cheater, defrauder, rook, sharper, swindler, trickster, victimizer. Informal: chiseler, crook, flimflammer. Slang: diddler, gyp, gypper. See HONEST … English dictionary for students
cozener — n. deceiver, swindler … English contemporary dictionary
cozener — cozˈener noun • • • Main Entry: ↑cozen … Useful english dictionary
cozen — cozener, n. cozeningly, adv. /kuz euhn/, v.t., v.i. to cheat, deceive, or trick. [1565 75; perh. < ONF coçonner to resell, v. deriv. of coçon retailer ( < L coctionem, acc. of coctio, cocio dealer), influenced by MF cousin dupe, lit., COUSIN] * * … Universalium
cheat — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. deceive, defraud (See deception). II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [One who cheats] Syn. rogue, cheater, swindler, fraud, quack, charlatan, conniver, confidence man, scammer, chiseler, impostor, masquerader,… … English dictionary for students
Losenger — Los en*ger, n. [OF. losengier, losengeor, fr. losengier to deceive, flatter, losenge, flattery, Pr. lauzenga, fr. L. laus praise. Cf. {Lozenge}.] A flatterer; a deceiver; a cozener. [Obs.] Chaucer. [1913 Webster] To a fair pair of gallows, there… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Shifter — Shift er, n. 1. One who, or that which, shifts; one who plays tricks or practices artifice; a cozener. [1913 Webster] T was such a shifter that, if truth were known, Death was half glad when he had got him down. Milton. [1913 Webster] 2. (Naut.)… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English