| 释义 | pretext
 pretextsomething put forward to conceal a true purpose; an ostensible reason; excuse: The leaders used presumed threats as a pretext to declare war.; subterfuge; evasionNot to be confused with:pretense – pretending or feigning: a pretense of listening; a false show of something: his sympathy was only a pretense; an allegation or claim: get a loan under false pretenses; shamming; semblance; mask, veil
 pre·textP0547700 (prē′tĕkst′)n. A reason or excuse given to hide the real reason for something.[Latin praetextum, from neuter past participle of praetexere, to disguise : prae-, pre- + texere, to weave; see teks- in Indo-European roots.]
 pretext(ˈpriːtɛkst) n1. a fictitious reason given in order to conceal the real one2. a specious excuse; pretence[C16: from Latin praetextum disguise, from praetexere to weave in front, disguise; see texture]pre•text(ˈpri tɛkst)
 n.    1.  something put forward to conceal a true purpose or object; ostensible reason; excuse.    2.  the misleading appearance or behavior assumed with this intention; subterfuge.  [1505–15; < Latin praetextum pretext, ornament, n. use of neuter past participle of praetexere to edge with, place in front, pretend. See pre-, texture]
 pretext- From Latin praetexere, "to disguise," from prae, "in front," and texere, "weave"—as something serving to conceal plans.See also related terms for weave.Thesaurus| Noun | 1. | pretext - something serving to conceal plans; a fictitious reason that is concocted in order to conceal the real reasonstalking-horsedissembling, feigning, pretense, pretence - pretending with intention to deceiveputoff - a pretext for delay or inaction |  |  | 2. |  pretext - an artful or simulated semblance; "under the guise of friendship he betrayed them"guise, pretence, pretensesemblance, gloss, color, colour - an outward or token appearance or form that is deliberately misleading; "he hoped his claims would have a semblance of authenticity"; "he tried to give his falsehood the gloss of moral sanction"; "the situation soon took on a different color" | 
 pretextnoun guise, excuse, veil, show, cover, appearance, device, mask, ploy, cloak, simulation, pretence, semblance, ruse, red herring, alleged reason They wanted a pretext to restart the war. He excused himself on the pretext of a stomach ache.pretextnoun1. A professed rather than a real reason:pretense, pretension.2. An explanation offered to justify an action or make it better understood:excuse, plea.3. A deceptive outward appearance:cloak, color, coloring, cover, disguise, disguisement, façade, face, false colors, front, gloss, guise, mask, masquerade, pretense, semblance, show, veil, veneer, window-dressing.Slang:  put-on.Translationspretext(ˈpriːtekst)  noun a reason given in order to hide the real reason; an excuse.  藉口,託辭  借口,托辞
 PretextRelated to Pretext: preamble
 PRETEXT. The reasons assigned to justify an act, which have only the appearance of truth, and which are without foundation; or which if true are not the true reasons for such act. Vattel, liv. 3, c. 3, 32. pretextRelated to pretext: preamble
 Synonyms for pretextnoun guiseSynonymsguiseexcuseveilshowcoverappearancedevicemaskploycloaksimulationpretencesemblancerusered herringalleged reason
 Synonyms for pretextnoun a professed rather than a real reasonSynonymsnoun an explanation offered to justify an action or make it better understoodSynonymsnoun a deceptive outward appearanceSynonymscloakcolorcoloringcoverdisguisedisguisementfaçadefacefalse colorsfrontglossguisemaskmasqueradepretensesemblanceshowveilveneerwindow-dressingput-on
 Synonyms for pretextnoun something serving to conceal plansSynonymsRelated Wordsdissemblingfeigningpretensepretenceputoff
 noun an artful or simulated semblanceSynonymsRelated Wordssemblanceglosscolorcolour
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