hoodwink的意思和读音

hoodwink

: [ˈhʊdˌwɪŋk] : ['hʊd.wɪŋk]

v.

hoodwinks  hoodwinking  hoodwinked  

v.trick,deceive,dupe,delude,take in

hoodwinkv.

1.~ sb (into doing sth)to trick sb

She had been hoodwinked into buying a worthless necklace.

v.1.,;2.使()

v.1.to make someone believe something that is not true

1. ,〖 slander〗 ;hoodwink;deceive〗 ;〖 not〗 ...

2. stink hoodwink honk ...

4. 〖 bullyandhumilate〗 hoodwink〖 hoodwink〗 ...

5. 〖 hoodwink〗 hoodwink〖 deceive;cheat;dupe〗 ...

6. hèng 〖 humbug;hoodwink〖 tellwithanirritatingvoice〗 ...

7. ... [ be humiliated] [ deceive;cheat;hoodwink] [ deceive or mislead people] ...

8. n. hoodwink , hoodwink n. hoodwink ...

:,,,,

1.To retrieve it, a hacker would have to hoodwink the user into dragging and dropping an object across the PC's screen.

2.We might satirize, circumvent or hoodwink the great prince, but we don't mess with him.

3.The men China sent to space was a fiction. The whole thing was shot in a Shanghai studio, and projected to hoodwink the world. Right?

4.Fishermen, however, may not be able to hoodwink consumers for much longer.

5.You know, a small patrol unit commander, can not have so much capability, can not hoodwink the public.

6.Example : The dishonest equipment merchant tried to hoodwink his customers by selling them broken, used machinery that he claimed was new.

7.And then there is the upbeat tone, a cowardly attempt to hoodwink staff into thinking something good will surely follow.

8.One tried and tested way is to hoodwink equity analysts, according to a new study* of 1, 300 corporate bosses, board directors and analysts.1300

9.Although it can whip up public opinion and hoodwink some people for a while, it cannot do so for long.

10.Some vendors hoodwink outside tourists by charging them exorbitant prices.