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单词 ruse
释义
ruseruse /ruːz $ ruːs, ruːz/ noun [countable] Word Origin
WORD ORIGINruse
Origin:
1400-1500 French, Old French ruser; RUSH1
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • He wore a fake mustache in a ruse to conceal his identity.
  • It was just a ruse to get what I wanted!
  • She asked to use the telephone as a ruse to enter the house.
EXAMPLES FROM THE CORPUS
  • Demonstrating parental behaviour towards infants may be a ruse by which low-ranking males are able to gain mating opportunities.
  • He no longer carried on the ruse of going up to the swimming pool every day.
  • Or it may have been no more than a ruse to exert pressure and force him to reconsider.
  • The ruse fell apart when Kennedy contacted the supposed letter writers after the sentencing to thank them for their interest.
  • The perverted originality of Iago's ruse, now linked to a cause, thereby loses its lurid gleam.
Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatora trick
a clever plan designed to make someone believe something that you want them to believe, or do something that you want them to do: · He pretended to be sick as a trick to get her to visit him.· Don't send her any money - it might be a trick.a trick question (=a question that is cleverly designed to make someone give a wrong answer): · He refused to answer, suspecting they were asking him a trick question.
a clever plan designed to harm someone, for example by making them go somewhere where they will be caught or attacked, or making them say something they will be punished for: · I didn't take the money with me, because I was worried it might be a trap.· Sensing the lawyer's trap, Horvath refused to answer.
especially written something that is said or done with the deliberate intention of deceiving people: · Ann quickly saw through his lies and deceptions.· What began as a misunderstanding quickly became a deliberate deception on the part of the network.
a trick, especially one that is amusing and not very serious: · It was just a ruse to get what I wanted!· She asked to use the telephone as a ruse to enter the house.
a false warning about something dangerous, given especially to someone in an official position, for example the police: · To everybody's great relief, the bomb scare turned out to be a hoax.· I got an email about another computer virus, but I'm pretty sure it's just a hoax.
informal a trick to get someone's money or make someone do something: · The two men were involved in an elaborate con to cheat investors out of their money.· Senior citizens are usually easy targets for con games.
when something that happens is not what it seems to be, and is really an attempt to deceive people: · Journalists suspected that the kidnapping was a put-up job.· The demonstration was a put-up job, organized by the authorities so they could arrest the cult leaders.
informal a clever and dishonest plan to get money: · The welfare scam was costing the federal government hundreds of thousands of dollars.· The offer of a "free" vacation to Florida sounds like a scam to me.
a trick that is intended to take someone's attention away from what someone else is trying to do: · Some of the prisoners started a fight as a diversion to give the others time to escape.create a diversion: · Rioters created a diversion by setting fire to vehicles close to the police station.
a person or thing that is used to trick someone by taking their attention away from an illegal or criminal act: · You act as a decoy and we'll sneak out the back.· The burglars started the fire as a decoy so that they could escape from police.
a clever trick used to deceive someone:  Agnes tried to think of a ruse to get Paul out of the house.
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更新时间:2025/1/27 12:15:00