deceptive如何读

英:[dɪˈseptɪv]

美:[dɪˈseptɪv]

deceptive英汉释义

adj.(形容词)
  1. 欺骗性的;误导的 likely to make sb believe sth that is not true

deceptive是什么意思

adj. (形容词)
  1. 骗人的
  2. 虚伪的
  3. 迷惑的
  4. 欺诈的
  5. 欺骗性的
  6. 误导的
  7. 靠不住的
  8. 难以捉摸的
  9. 虚假的
  10. 可能欺骗的
  11. 导致误解的
  12. 易使人误解的
  13. 诈欺的

deceptive自然拼读

de·cep·tive

dih sep tv

deceptive扩展

deceptively (adv.), deceptiveness (n.)

deceptive词根

词根:deceptive

adv.

deceptively 迷惑地,骗人地;虚伪地

n.

deception 欺骗,欺诈;骗术

deceptiveness 虚伪;迷惑骗人

deceptive英英释义

Adjective

1. causing one to believe what is not true or fail to believe what is true;

"deceptive calm"

"a delusory pleasure"

2. tending to deceive or mislead either deliberately or inadvertently;

"the deceptive calm in the eye of the storm"

"deliberately deceptive packaging"

"a misleading similarity"

"statistics can be presented in ways that are misleading"

deceptive词源中文解释

"具有误导或给人错误印象的倾向",来自1610年代的法语 deceptif(14世纪末),源自中世纪拉丁语 deceptivus,来自 decept-,拉丁语 decipere 的过去分词词干,意为"诱捕,欺骗,欺诈",源自 de 的"从...来"或贬义(参见 de-),加上 capere 的"拿取",源自 PIE 词根 *kap- 的"抓住"。

在这个意义上,它取代了英语中的 deceptious(大约1600年),来自法语 deceptieux,源自中世纪拉丁语 deceptiosus,来自 deceptionem; 还有 deceptory(15世纪中叶),来自拉丁语 deceptorious。相关词汇: Deceptively; deceptiveness。

deceptive词源英文解释

see deception

The first known use of deceptive was circa 1611

deceptive儿童词典英英释义

decidedadjective

unmistakable, clear

a decided advantage

free from doubt : firm entry 1

a decided tone of voice

decidedadjective

unmistakable, clear

a decided advantage

free from doubt : firm entry 1

a decided tone of voice

decideverb

to give a judgment on

decided the case in favor of the person accused

to bring to a final end

one blow decided the fight

to cause to come to a choice or judgment

their appeals decided me to give generously

to make a choice or judgment

decided to go

decibelnoun

a unit for measuring the relative loudness of sounds—abbreviation dB

decibelnoun

a unit for measuring the relative loudness of sounds—abbreviation dB

deceptiveadjective

tending or having power to deceive : misleading

a deceptive appearance

deceptiveadjective

tending or having power to deceive : misleading

a deceptive appearance

deceptiveadjective

tending or having power to deceive : misleading

a deceptive appearance

deceptive 例句

1 They had gone but halfway around the floor when Francie discovered that his gangling awkwardness was extremely deceptive.

2 Climate change is deceptive because its signs occur almost imperceptibly.

气候变化很具有欺骗性,因为它的变化信号几乎觉察不到.

3 There’s no immediate strife in these songs, only musing and reflection, sadder but not necessarily wiser, and offered with the deceptive composure of chronic depression.

4 Its title, according to the program notes, comes from the Irish word for “a disturbance in the elements,” and its baseline is deceptive stasis.

5 Advocates, such as Hudson, disagree and say they think the government must protect consumers against “unfair and deceptive” practices.

6 "My gripe is with what I believe is deceptive marketing from @Amazon and poor quality controls," he added.

7 Working with the cinematographer Sean Price Williams, Perry responds vitally to his own emotional impulses in the presence of the actors; the dialogue that they send spinning aloft is pugnaciously lyrical, gracefully deceptive, awkwardly tender.

8 Word from the runway is that the height of these 1940s heels is deceptive and that practicing walking in them would do their wearer good.

9 Mimicking the look and feel of news or lifestyle reporting, without full disclosure that a source paid to appear, is “deceptive and unacceptable,” he said, especially in light of the declining public trust in journalism.

10 “But if anyone feels an ad is deceptive or misleading, they’re encouraged to file a complaint with the FTC,” he added.

11 It rose to 20 percent in the 1990s and is now close to 35 percent, but this last figure may be deceptive.

12 You’re more deceptive than I am.

你比我更会骗人。

13 That excellent deceptive play helped Stayman and Rasmussen to win the event.

14 But the pleasure and feeling of power that women derive from self-improvement often grows right along with it; the boon is both deceptive and real.

15 Alice was gripping the gunwales and peering as hard as she could in the deceptive light.

16 Almost all of his discussion consists in giving examples of hallucinations and other deceptive experiences and explaining how the brain is able to produce them.

17 “Listen to the story and learn from the crow’s mistakes, for the crow did not see the fox’s sneer, but only heard his deceptive words.”

18 What follows is a wild mashup of Shakespeare and pop-culture references that seems chaotically improvised but takes a deceptive amount of skill to execute.

19 Naturally, I shouldn't give too much of this away, but let's just say that the almost-Asperger behavior is deceptive, and so too is Cyrus' welcoming embrace.

20 Yet wild things happen in this movement: an eerily calm passage for veiled winds; a relentless fugue; a deceptive final flourish that leads to the most quizzical section of the entire piece.

deceptive 同义词

5 蒙惑

cheat deceive

7 误导的

wrong-headed misleading

12 使人误解

deceitful fallacious deceptively

13 欺骗性的

dishonest

14 造成假象

deceptively

deceptive 短语相关

looks can be deceiving/deceptive

相关词