-
1 deception
[di'sepʃən]((an act of) deceiving: Deception is difficult in these circumstances.) prevara- deceptively* * *[disépšən]nounprevara, goljufija; zmota, iluzija -
2 self-deception
[selfdisépšən]nounsee self-deceit -
3 innocent
['inəsnt]1) (not guilty (of a crime, misdeed etc): A man should be presumed innocent of a crime until he is proved guilty; They hanged an innocent man.) nedolžen2) ((of an action etc) harmless or without harmful or hidden intentions: innocent games and amusements; an innocent remark.) nedolžen3) (free from, or knowing nothing about, evil etc: an innocent child; You can't be so innocent as to believe what advertisements say!) naiven•- innocence* * *I [ínəsnt]adjective ( innocently adverb)nedolžen, neomadeževan, čist; neškodljiv, preprost, neizumetničen; juridically nedolžen (of), dopusten, legalen, nesumljiv; colloquially bedast, naiveninnocent air — nedolžen obraz, nedolžen videzinnocent goods — nesumljiva roba, nepretihotapljena robacolloquially innocent of — brezII [ínəsnt]nounnedolžnež, nedolžen otročiček; bedak, naivnež, ignorantthe massacre of the innocents — pokol nedolžnih otročičkov v Betlehemu; parliament slang skrajšanje delovnega reda zaradi časovne stiskeInnocents' Day — 28. december, dan nedolžnih otročičkov
См. также в других словарях:
deception — ► NOUN 1) the action of deceiving. 2) a thing that deceives … English terms dictionary
deception — de‧cep‧tion [dɪˈsepʆn] noun [countable, uncountable] another word for deceit: • He pleaded guilty to charges of forgery and deception. * * * deception UK US /dɪˈsepʃən/ noun [C or U] ► dishonest or illegal methods that are used to get something … Financial and business terms
deception — de·cep·tion /di sep shən/ n 1: an act of deceiving 2: something that deceives: deceit Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
deception — noun Etymology: Middle English decepcioun, from Anglo French deception, from Late Latin deception , deceptio, from Latin decipere to deceive Date: 15th century 1. a. the act of deceiving b. the fact or condition of being deceived 2 … New Collegiate Dictionary
deception — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ cruel ▪ elaborate ▪ His elaborate deception fooled everyone. ▪ deliberate, intentional ▪ outright … Collocations dictionary
deception — noun 1) they obtained money by deception Syn: deceit, deceitfulness, duplicity, double dealing, fraud, cheating, trickery, chicanery, deviousness, slyness, wiliness, guile, bluff, lying, pretense, treachery; informal crookedness … Thesaurus of popular words
deception — noun 1) they obtained money by deception Syn: deceit, duplicity, double dealing, fraud, cheating, trickery, guile, bluff, lying, pretence, treachery 2) it was all a deception Syn … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
deception — noun (C, U) the act of deliberately making someone believe something that is not true: outrage at the government s deception … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
deception — noun An instance of actions and/or schemes fabricated to mislead and/or delude someone into errantly believing a lie or inaccuracy. See Also: deceive, deceptive … Wiktionary
deception — noun the action of deceiving. ↘a thing that deceives. Origin ME: from late L. deceptio(n ), from decipere deceive … English new terms dictionary
deception — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Misrepresentation Nouns 1. (act of deceiving) deception, deceptiveness; falseness, falsehood, untruth; imposition, imposture, misinformation, disinformation; fraud, fraudulence, deceit, deceitfulness,… … English dictionary for students