-
1 narre
1(én for ngt) одура́чивать, обма́нывать (кого-л. в чём-л.)* * *bamboozle, con, deceive, delude, dupe, fool, hoax, outwit* * *vb fool,T take in,( bedrage også) deceive;( skuffe) fail, disappoint;(fx ved ikke at komme) you must not fail me;F lure somebody away;( franarre) trick (el. do) somebody out of something ( fx he tricked me out of my money);( ikke lade få) do (el. cheat) somebody out of something ( fx he did me out of a trip to the USA which he had promised me);[ narre noget fra en] trick somebody out of something;[ lade sig narre af] be taken in by; be deceived by;[ den bil er du ikke narret med] you have got your money's worth with that car; you won't regret having bought that car;[ narre sig selv] deceive oneself;[ narre en til at gøre noget] trick somebody into doing something;[ narre en til at tro] induce somebody to believe. -
2 bedrage
* * *vb( narre) deceive,T take in, cheat;( besvige) defraud, swindle;( vildlede, F) delude;( sin ægtefælle) be unfaithful to;[ bedrage ham for] cheat him (out) of,F defraud him of;[ skinnet bedrager] appearances are deceptive;[ den bedragne] the victim. -
3 bedåre
-
4 lys
1. sg - lyset, pl - lys1) свет м; освеще́ние сtǽnde lyset — заже́чь свет
slúkke lyset — потуши́ть свет
2) свеча́ ж2. aсве́тлый; я́сныйde lyse nǽtter — бе́лые но́чи
* * *fair, light, lightness, sunlit* * *I. (et -) light ( fx artificial light; the light(s) went out);(stearinlys etc) candle;( belysning) lighting;[ gå af lyset] get out of the light;[ føre bag lyset] deceive, take in;[ der gik et lys op for mig] a light dawned on me;[ i lyset af](fig) in the light of;[ stå i lyset for en] stand in somebody's light;[ stå sig selv i lyset] stand in one's own light;[ stille noget i et nyt lys] throw new light on something;[ stille ham (, det) i et ugunstigt (, skævt) lys] place him (, it) in an unfavourable (, false) light;(fig) throw light on;[ lede (el. søge) med lys og lygte] hunt (el. search) high and low (efterfor);(dvs falde i søvn etc) go out like a light;[ så rank som et lys] straight as a poker;[ sætte lys](teat) set the lights;[ inklusive lys og varme] inclusive of lighting and heating;[ arbejde ved lys] work by artificial light;[ han er ikke noget lys] he is not very bright (el. clever); he is not on the bright side;II. adj light,( klar) bright;( om kvinde også) blonde;( om træ) blond ( fx furniture, oak),( håbefuld) bright ( fx future, prospects),( munter) cheerful ( fx disposition), sunny ( fx he has a sunny nature);[ før det blev lyst] before daybreak;[ en lys idé, et lyst indfald] a bright idea,T a brainwave;[ lyse minder] happy memories;[ lyse nætter] [light summer nights]; -
5 snyde
cheat, con, deceive, double-cross, have, screw, swindle* * *vb (snød, snydt)( narre) cheat, take in,T do;( uden objekt) cheat ( fx cheat at cards; you are cheating!),[ snyde lyset] snuff the candle;[ snyde næsen] blow one's nose;[ med præp & sig:][ snyde ham for] cheat (, T: do) him out of;[ blive snydt for] be cheated (, done) out of ( fx money; a chance);(= udeblive) cut a lesson;[ snyde i skat](dvs fuske med opgørelsen) fiddle one's income tax,( prøve at undgå) dodge income tax;[ den bil er du ikke snydt med] you've got your money's worth with that car; you won't regret having bought that car;[ snyde med regnskaberne] fiddle the accounts;[ snyde sig fra] shirk ( fx one's duty, the responsibility),T dodge ( fx the washing-up);[ snyde sig til at gøre noget] do something on the sly;[ han er som snydt ud af næsen på sin far] he is the living image (, T: the spit and image) of his father;[ snyde ved eksamen] cheat at an examination. -
6 at bedrage
to deceive
См. также в других словарях:
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;… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
deceive — de‧ceive [dɪˈsiːv] verb [transitive] to make someone believe something that is not true in order to get what you want: • Postal officials have long deceived the public on how slow mail delivery really is. deceive somebody into something •… … Financial and business terms
deceive — de·ceive vb de·ceived, de·ceiv·ing vt: to cause to accept as true or valid what is false or invalid vi: to practice deceit compare defraud, mislead Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster … Law dictionary
deceive — [dē sēv′, disēv′] vt. deceived, deceiving [ME deceiven < OFr deceveir < L decipere, to ensnare, deceive < de , from + capere, to take: see HAVE] 1. to make (a person) believe what is not true; delude; mislead 2. Archaic to be false to;… … English World dictionary
deceive — c.1300, from O.Fr. decevoir (12c., Mod.Fr. décevoir) to deceive, from L. decipere to ensnare, take in, beguile, cheat, from de from or pejorative + capere to take (see CAPABLE (Cf. capable)). Related: Deceived; deceiver; deceiving … Etymology dictionary
deceive — deceive, mislead, delude, beguile, betray, double crossmean to lead astray or into evil or to frustrate by under handedness or craft. A person or thing deceives one by leading one to take something false as true, something nonexistent as real,… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
deceive — [v] mislead; be dishonest bamboozle*, beat, beat out of, beguile, betray, bilk, buffalo*, burn, cheat, circumvent, clip, con, cozen, cross up, defraud, delude, disappoint, double cross, dupe, ensnare, entrap, fake, falsify, fleece, fool, gouge,… … New thesaurus
deceive — ► VERB 1) deliberately mislead into believing something false. 2) (of a thing) give a mistaken impression. DERIVATIVES deceiver noun. ORIGIN Old French deceivre, from Latin decipere ensnare, cheat … English terms dictionary
deceive — de|ceive [dıˈsi:v] v [T] [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: deceivre, from Latin decipere] 1.) to make someone believe something that is not true = ↑trick →↑deception ▪ He had been deceived by a young man claiming to be the son of a… … Dictionary of contemporary English
deceive */ — UK [dɪˈsiːv] / US [dɪˈsɪv] verb [transitive] Word forms deceive : present tense I/you/we/they deceive he/she/it deceives present participle deceiving past tense deceived past participle deceived Metaphor: Deceiving someone is like sending or… … English dictionary
deceive — [[t]dɪsi͟ːv[/t]] deceives, deceiving, deceived 1) VERB If you deceive someone, you make them believe something that is not true, usually in order to get some advantage for yourself. [V n] He has deceived and disillusioned us all... [V n into ing] … English dictionary