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1 defraud
defraud [dɪˈfrɔ:d][+ state] frauder ; [+ person] escroquer* * *[dɪ'frɔːd]transitive verb escroquer [client, employer]; frauder [tax authority] -
2 defraud
defraud vtr escroquer [client, employer] ; frauder [tax authority] ; to defraud sb of sth escroquer qch à qn ; to defraud the taxman of £20,000 escroquer 20 000 livres sterling au fisc. -
3 defraud
defraud [dɪ'frɔ:d]∎ to defraud sb of sth escroquer qch à qn, frustrer qn de qch;∎ he defrauded the government of £15,000 in unemployment benefits il a frauduleusement perçu 15000 livres d'allocations chômage∎ Law conspiracy to defraud entente f délictueuse dans le but de frauder -
4 cheat
cheat [tʃi:t](a) (defraud, swindle) escroquer, léser;∎ to cheat sb out of sth escroquer qch à qn;∎ to feel cheated se sentir lésé ou frustré;∎ to cheat sb into doing sth faire faire qch à qn en le trompant∎ to cheat death échapper à la morttricher;∎ he always cheats at cards il triche toujours aux cartes;∎ she was expelled from university for cheating elle fut renvoyée de l'université pour avoir triché aux examens3 noun(b) (dishonest practice) tricherie f, tromperie f(c) (in computer game) cheat m∎ he cheated on his income tax il a triché sur sa déclaration d'impôts(b) (be unfaithful to) tromper;∎ he cheats on his wife il trompe sa femme
См. также в других словарях:
defraud — de‧fraud [dɪˈfrɔːd ǁ ˈfrɒːd] verb [intransitive, transitive] LAW to gain money or goods from someone by saying or doing something dishonest: • He admitted attempting to defraud the insurance company. defraud somebody of something • She defrauded… … Financial and business terms
defraud — de|fraud [dıˈfro:d US ˈfro:d] v [T] to trick a person or organization in order to get money from them defraud sb of sth ▪ She defrauded her employers of thousands of pounds. ▪ He faces charges of theft and conspiracy to defraud (=a secret plan to … Dictionary of contemporary English
dhebh-, dhebh-eu- — dhebh , dhebh eu English meaning: to harm Deutsche Übersetzung: “beschädigen, verkũrzen, betrũgen” Note: the nasalized forms (*dhembh ) are as proportional neologisms to interpret the root after containing n . Material:… … Proto-Indo-European etymological dictionary
set — set1 W1S1 [set] v past tense and past participle set present participle setting ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(put)¦ 2¦(put into surface)¦ 3¦(story)¦ 4¦(consider)¦ 5¦(establish something)¦ 6¦(start something happening)¦ 7¦(decide something)¦ … Dictionary of contemporary English
investor — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ big, large, major ▪ long term ▪ average, ordinary, small ▪ Many ordinary investors s … Collocations dictionary
find — [faɪnd] verb found PTandPP [faʊnd] [transitive] 1. if you find work or employment, you get a job or some work. If you find someone to do a job, you employ them to do that job: • Karen found a job with a major travel company after she completed… … Financial and business terms
conspiracy — con‧spi‧ra‧cy [kənˈspɪrəsi] noun conspiracies PLURALFORM [countable, uncountable] a secret plan that is made by two or more people to do something harmful or illegal: conspiracy to do something • All three men were charged with conspiracy to… … Financial and business terms
intent — ▪ I. intent in‧tent 1 [ɪnˈtent] noun [uncountable] 1. an intention: intent to do something • The two software companies have signed a letter of intent to merge. see also declaration of intent … Financial and business terms
invoice — document which shows the customer charges for goods delivered or work done. Glossary of Business Terms Bill written by a seller of goods or services and submitted to a purchaser for payment. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary The document against… … Financial and business terms
Invoice — Bill written by a seller of goods or services and submitted to the purchaser. The New York Times Financial Glossary * * * ▪ I. invoice in‧voice 1 [ˈɪnvɔɪs] noun [countable] ACCOUNTING 1. a document sent by a seller to a customer with details of… … Financial and business terms