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1 diddle
/'didl/ * ngoại động từ - (từ lóng), lừa gạt, lừa đảo =to diddle someone out pf something+ lừa gạt ai lấy cái gì -
2 anschmieren
- {to fob} đánh lừa, lừa dối, lừa bịp, đánh tráo - {to smear} làm vấy bẩn, làm đốm bẩn, làm hoen ố, làm mờ, làm tối, nói xấu, bôi nhọ, đánh bại, đánh gục hắn, chặn đứng = jemanden anschmieren {to diddle someone; to sell someone a pup}+ -
3 betrügen
- {to bamboozle} bịp, lừa bịp - {to betray} bội phản đem nộp cho, bội phản đem giao cho, phản bội, phụ bạc, tiết lộ, để lộ ra, lừa dối, phụ, dẫn vào - {to bilk} quịt, trốn, lừa, lừa đảo, lừa gạt, trốn tránh - {to cheat} tiêu, làm tiêu tan, gian lận, đánh bạc bịp, có ngoại tình, + on) không chung thuỷ - {to chisel} đục, chạm trổ - {to chouse} đánh lừa - {to con} học thuộc lòng, nghiên cứu, nghiền ngẫm, điều khiển, lái conn) - {to deceive} làm thất vọng - {to diddle} - {to flam} - {to fool} lừa phỉnh, lãng phí, làm những chuyện ngớ ngẩn ngu dại, vớ vẩn, lãng phí thời gian, làm trò hề, làm trò ngố, đùa cợt - {to gammon} muối và hun khói, thắng hai ván liền, buộc vào mũi tàu, chơi khăm, giả vờ đóng kịch - {to hoax} chơi xỏ - {to hocus} chơi khăm chơi xỏ, đánh thuốc mê, bỏ thuốc mê vào - {to pigeon} - {to rook} bịp trong cờ bạc, bán giá cắt cổ - {to shark} làm ăn bất chính, ngốn nuốt - {to slang} mắng, chửi, rủa, nói lóng - {to spoof} - {to swap} đổi, trao đổi, đổi chác - {to swindle} bịp bợm - {to thimblerig} - {to trick} - {to victimize} dùng làm vật hy sinh, đem hy sinh, đối xử tàn nhẫn = betrügen [um] {to cozen [of,out of]; to defraud [of]; to jockey [out of]; to juggle [out of]}+ = betrügen (Sport) {to welsh}+ = betrügen (betrug,betrogen) {to sting (stung,stung)+ = betrügen (betrog,betrogen) {to beguile; to fleece}+ = betrügen (betrog,betrogen) [um] {to beguile [of]; to trim [out of]}+ = jemanden betrügen {to play someone false}+
См. также в других словарях:
diddle — to cheat, swindle, 1806, from dial. duddle, diddle to totter (1630s). Meaning waste time is recorded from 1825. Meaning to have sex with is from 1879; that of to masturbate (especially of women) is from 1950s. More or less unrelated meanings that … Etymology dictionary
diddle — diddle1 [did′ l] vt. diddled, diddling [dial. duddle, diddle, to totter, akin to DODDER1] 1. Informal to move back and forth in a jerky or rapid manner; jiggle 2. Slang a) to have sexual intercourse with b) … English World dictionary
Diddle — Did dle, v. i. [Cf. {Daddle}.] To totter, as a child in walking. [Obs.] Quarles. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Diddle — Did dle, v. t. [Perh. from AS. dyderian to deceive, the letter r being changed to l.] To cheat or overreach. [Colloq.] Beaconsfield. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
diddle — did‧dle [ˈdɪdl] verb [transitive] informal to get money from someone by deceiving them: • I m sure he diddled me out of quite a lot of money! … Financial and business terms
diddle — ► VERB informal ▪ cheat or swindle. ORIGIN probably from Jeremy Diddler, a character in the farce Raising the Wind (1803) who constantly borrowed small sums of money … English terms dictionary
diddle — diddle1 diddler, n. /did l/, v.t., diddled, diddling. Informal. to cheat; swindle; hoax. [1800 10; perh. special use of DIDDLE2] diddle2 diddler, n. /did l/, v., diddled, diddling … Universalium
diddle — [19] The current meaning of diddle, ‘to cheat or swindle’, was probably inspired by Jeremy Diddler, a character who was constantly borrowing money and neglecting to repay it in James Kenney’s play Raising the Wind (1803) (the expression raise the … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins
diddle — [19] The current meaning of diddle, ‘to cheat or swindle’, was probably inspired by Jeremy Diddler, a character who was constantly borrowing money and neglecting to repay it in James Kenney’s play Raising the Wind (1803) (the expression raise the … Word origins
diddle — did|dle [ˈdıdl] v [T] BrE informal [Date: 1800 1900; Origin: Perhaps from Diddler, name of a character in a 19th century English play] to get money from someone by deceiving them diddle sb out of sth ▪ They ll diddle you out of your last penny if … Dictionary of contemporary English
diddle — vb 1. British to cheat. A common colloquial ism recorded since the early 1800s. ► Comedian Ken Dodd insisted on cash for shows to diddle the taxman, his former agent told a jury yesterday. (Daily Mirror, 5 July 1989) In Old English dydrian meant… … Contemporary slang