cheat
cheat 英 [tʃi:t] 美 [tʃit]
v. 欺骗;作弊 n. 欺骗,作弊
进行时:cheating 过去式:cheated 过去分词:cheated 第三人称单数:cheats 名词复数:cheats
- To cheat is to use sneaky, unfair methods to get something you want. No one's going to want to play with you if you always cheat at mini golf.
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- v. 欺骗;作弊
- n. 欺骗,作弊
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1. She is accused of attempting to cheat the taxman.
她被指控企图蒙骗税务员。
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2. He cheated his wayinto the job.
他骗取了这份工作。
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3. He cheats at cards.
他玩牌爱作弊。
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4. You little cheat!
你这小滑头!
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5. There's a cheat you can use to get to the next level.
有种秘技,你可以用来到达下一关。
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6. It's really a cheat, but you can ...
这样做其实是骗人,但你可以...
- cheat (n.) late 14c., "forfeited property, reversion of property to a lord," from cheat (v.) or from escheat (n.). Meaning "a fraud committed by deception, a deceptive act" is from 1640s; earlier, in thieves' jargon, it meant "a stolen thing" (late 16c.), and earlier still "dice" (1530s). Meaning "a swindler, a person who cheats" is from 1660s; from 1680s as "anything which deceives or is intended to deceive."
- cheat (v.) mid-15c., "to escheat, to seize as an escheat," a shortening of Old French escheat, legal term for revision of property to the state when the owner dies without heirs, literally "that which falls to one," past participle of escheoir "happen, befall, occur, take place; fall due; lapse (legally)," from Late Latin *excadere "fall away, fall out," from Latin ex- "out" (see ex-) + cadere "to fall" (from PIE root *kad- "to fall").
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