英:[dɪ'septɪvlɪ]
美:[dɪˈsɛptɪvlɪ]
英:[dɪ'septɪvlɪ]
美:[dɪˈsɛptɪvlɪ]
词根:deceptive
adj.deceptive 欺诈的;迷惑的;虚伪的
n.deception 欺骗,欺诈;骗术
deceptiveness 虚伪;迷惑骗人
Adverb
1. in a misleading way;
"the exam looked deceptively easy"
see deception
The first known use of deceptive was circa 1611
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
1 "Mankell is a deceptively gifted writer," Queenan wrote, "who uses the plebian mystery format to address the disintegration of Swedish society, the horrors of old age, the very meaning of police work."
2 It's deceptively laid-back, but it grows on you.
3 It’s been an unexpected tour of Midtown for the deceptively simple set — which, with its cleft walls, raked floors and embedded speakers emitting anxiety-provoking sounds, won this year’s Tony Award for best scenic design.
4 Mr. Lipton translates that sensibility into his own disarming and deceptively seamless style.
5 That deceptively simple statement is a brilliant insight, though I can’t claim credit for it.
6 The show, a highlight of the coming season at 59E59 Theaters, features a deceptively simple plot: A woman heads to meet her blind husband at a train station.
7 What follows continues in the spirit of James Bond: ruthlessly professional, deceptively effortless and comfortably familiar.
8 By contrast, Little Boots's set of deceptively frothy, Robynesque new tracks is perfunctorily received: she never quite transcended cult status in the first place.
9 "Will is so deceptively all-American handsome, but his taste in comedy is so wonderfully weird and unafraid to be arbitrary, dark or occasionally even filthy," Fey said in an e-mail.
10 The excerpts below amply demonstrate his deceptively simple yet commanding craft.
11 The tunnel to the subterranean bunker that played a pivotal role in the liberation of Paris is long and narrow, each step down deceptively steep.
12 Yet the likeliest explanation for his durability, for his heightened esteem among some peers, is deceptively simple.
13 One of them is a deceptively simple scene of a royal residence during December.
14 The sea, dark and rarely placid, is deceptively vital.
15 His mouth looked deceptively gentle.
他说话时装作很温柔.
16 The fresh gold leaf looks as deceptively venerable as the rest of the room.
17 Just as she did on “The Daily Show,” Ms. Bee, 46, a deceptively upbeat comedian, was meeting these challenges with cheerfulness tempered by a sarcastic streak.
18 His complete Chopin recordings have been issued in a two-disc set, including the First Piano Concerto, the Third Sonata, the 14 waltzes, selected nocturnes and mazurkas, and an incomparable account of the deceptively complex Barcarolle.
19 Perhaps it's the sparse, almost deceptively simple feel of what a few people are calling "soulful dubstep".
20 The rest of the song clocks in at a deceptively thick 2:41 and is like if the B-52’s and Grace Jones turned “Vogue” into “Like a Prayer.”
1 欺骗
falsidical deceptive beguiling fallacious duplicitous delusive colorable fraudulently deceivingly beguilingly imposturing quackishness do sell fraud cheat deception juggle bunk imposition spoof deceit trickery swindle sleight duplicity subterfuge humbug gammon falseness mystification flam skullduggery skulduggery fraudulence knavery shenanigan beguilement humbuggery hokey-pokey cozenage bamboozlement hocuspocus double-deal impose deceive jockey fudge hocus-pocus illude have job stick beat trick bite trim fool scam hype mock sting cod fiddle mislead Nick chisel hoax dupe gull victimize delude beguile hoodwink bamboozle bilk diddle bunco hocus gyp double-cross shortchange befool chouse do a snow job put over on have a game with practise on practise upon skin game act a lie play a part shell game double cross put upon make a fool of
2 使人误解
3 造成假象
5 人误解