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  1. Dictionary
    double-cross
    /ˌdʌb(ə)lˈkrɒs/

    verb

    • 1. deceive or betray (a person with whom one is supposedly cooperating): "he begins to consider double-crossing his boss"

    noun

    • 1. a betrayal of someone with whom one is supposedly cooperating: "the firm's representative claimed that the outside deal was a double-cross"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. a trick in which you deceive someone when you are doing something illegal together or when you are planning to trick someone else together: They set up a double-cross to cheat him of his money. More examples. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  3. The meaning of DOUBLE-CROSS is to deceive by double-dealing : betray. How to use double-cross in a sentence.

  4. a trick in which you deceive someone when you are doing something illegal together or when you are planning to trick someone else together: They set up a double-cross to cheat him of his money. More examples. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases.

  5. Double cross definition: a betrayal or swindle of a colleague.. See examples of DOUBLE CROSS used in a sentence.

  6. double-cross. Word forms: plural, 3rd person singular present tense double-crosses , present participle double-crossing , past tense, past participle double-crossed. verb. If someone you trust double-crosses you, they do something which harms you instead of doing something they had promised to do. [informal]

  7. Jun 4, 2024 · double-cross (third-person singular simple present double-crosses, present participle double-crossing, simple past and past participle double-crossed) To betray or go back on; to deceive someone after having gained their trust and led them to believe that they were being aided.

  8. noun. an act of betrayal. “he gave us the old double cross ”. synonyms: double-crossing. see more. see less. type of: betrayal, perfidy, treachery, treason. an act of deliberate betrayal.

  9. n. 1. a betrayal or swindle of a friend or colleague. 2. the act of winning or attempting to win a contest that one has agreed to lose. 3. a genetic cross in which both parents are first-generation hybrids from single crosses. [1825–35] dou′ble-cross′. v.t. to betray or swindle, esp. by an action contrary to an agreed upon course. [1900–05]

  10. Double-cross Definition. To betray (a person) by doing the opposite of, or intentionally failing to do, what one has promised. To betray by acting in contradiction to a prior agreement. To betray or go back on. An act of betraying an ally, friend, or associate.

  11. DOUBLE–CROSS meaning: to cheat or deceive (someone) especially by doing something that is different from what you said you would do.