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  1. deceive The cigarette companies deceived the public about the health risks of cigarettes. deceive yourself You'd be deceiving yourself if you believed that. trick She felt they had tricked her into saying more than she intended. fool You don't fool me with your innocent act. take in They claimed to be destitute, but we weren't taken in.

  2. DECEIVED definition: 1. past simple and past participle of deceive 2. to persuade someone that something false is the…. Learn more.

  3. Oct 1, 2024 · transitive verb. 1. : to cause to accept as true or valid what is false or invalid. deceiving customers about the condition of the cars. bluffing at poker in order to deceive the other players. 2. archaic : ensnare. … he it was whose guile … deceived the mother of mankind …. John Milton.

  4. to persuade someone that something false is the truth, or to keep the truth hidden from someone for your own advantage: The company deceived customers by selling old computers as new ones. deceive someone into doing something The sound of the door closing deceived me into thinking they had gone out. Synonym. trick.

  5. These verbs mean to cause someone to believe something untrue, usually with an ulterior motive in mind. Deceive, the most general, stresses the deliberate misrepresentation of what one knows to be true: "We are inclined to believe those whom we do not know, because they have never deceived us" (Samuel Johnson).

  6. Definition of deceive verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  7. 4 meanings: 1. to mislead by deliberate misrepresentation or lies 2. to delude (oneself) 3. to be unfaithful to (one's sexual.... Click for more definitions.

  8. Definitions of 'deceive'. 1. If you deceive someone, you make them believe something that is not true, usually in order to get some advantage for yourself. [...] 2. If something deceives you, it gives you a wrong impression and makes you believe something that is not true. [...]

  9. to make someone believe something that is not true, in order to get money or something else from them: also means to act in a dishonest way in order to gain an advantage, especially in a game, competition, or exam: Copying someone else's answers is one kind of cheating.

  10. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English de‧ceive /dɪˈsiːv/ verb [transitive] 1 to make someone believe something that is not true → deception He had been deceived by a young man claiming to be the son of a millionaire. deceive somebody into doing something He tried to deceive the public into thinking the war could still be won ...