Word Meanings - JUGGLE - Book Publishers vocabulary database
Etym: 1. To play tricks by sleight of hand; to cause amusement and sport by tricks of skill; to conjure. 2. To practice artifice or imposture. Be these juggling fiends no more believed. Shak.
Possible synonyms: (Same meaning words of JUGGLE)
- Cheat Overreach
- fleece
- silence
- trick
- gull
- cozen
- juggle
- defraud
- swindle
- dupe
- beguile
- deceive
- deprive
- hoodwink
- prevaricate
- dissemble
- shuffle
- inveigle
- Counterfeit
- Cheat
- fraud
- artifice
- fabrication
- pretense
- ruse
- sham
- Trick
- Artifice
- contrivance
- machination
- guile
- stratagem
- wile
- cheat
- antic
- vagary
- finesse
- sleight
- deception
- imposition
- delusion
- legerdemain
Possible antonyms: (opposite words of JUGGLE)
Related words: (words related to JUGGLE)
- ANTICAUSODIC
See ANTICAUSOTIC - SLEIGHTLY
Cunningly. Huloet. - ANTICLY
Oddly; grotesquely. - DEPRIVEMENT
Deprivation. - ANTICHLOR
Any substance used in removing the excess of chlorine left in paper pulp or stuffs after bleaching. - ANTIC-MASK
An antimask. B. Jonson. - COZENAGE
The art or practice of cozening; artifice; fraud. Shak. - ANTICHRISTIANISM; ANTICHRISTIANITY
Opposition or contrariety to the Christian religion. - DETECTOR BAR
A bar, connected with a switch, longer than the distance between any two consecutive wheels of a train , laid inside a rail and operated by the wheels so that the switch cannot be thrown until all the train is past the switch. - ARTIFICER
A military mechanic, as a blacksmith, carpenter, etc.; also, one who prepares the shells, fuses, grenades, etc., in a military laboratory. Syn. -- Artisan; artist. See Artisan. (more info) 1. An artistic worker; a mechanic or manufacturer; one - SLEIGHT
1. Cunning; craft; artful practice. "His sleight and his covin." Chaucer. 2. An artful trick; sly artifice; a feat so dexterous that the manner of performance escapes observation. The world hath many subtle sleights. Latimer. 3. Dexterous - FINESSE
The act of finessing. See Finesse, v. i., 2. (more info) 1. Subtilty of contrivance to gain a point; artifice; stratagem. This is the artificialest piece of finesse to persuade men into slavery. Milton. - EXPOSER
One who exposes or discloses. - DETECT
1. To uncover; to discover; to find out; to bring to light; as, to detect a crime or a criminal; to detect a mistake in an account. Plain good intention . . . is as easily discovered at the first view, as fraud is surely detected at last. Burke. - SLEIGHTY
Cunning; sly. Huloet. - ANTICIPANT
Anticipating; expectant; -- with of. Wakening guilt, anticipant of hell. Southey. - ANTICOHERER
A device, one form of which consists of a scratched deposit of silver on glass, used in connection with the receiving apparatus for reading wireless signals. The electric waves falling on this contrivance increase its resistance several times. The - ANTIC
"Lords of antic fame." Phaer. 2. Odd; fantastic; fanciful; grotesque; ludicrous. The antic postures of a merry-andrew. Addison. The Saxons . . . worshiped many idols, barbarous in name, some monstrous, all antic for shape. Fuller. (more info) 1. - DEFRAUD
To deprive of some right, interest, or property, by a deceitful device; to withhold from wrongfully; to injure by embezzlement; to cheat; to overreach; as, to defraud a servant, or a creditor, or the state; -- with of before the thing - ANTICIPATIVE
Anticipating, or containing anticipation. "Anticipative of the feast to come." Cary. -- An*tic"i*pa*tive*ly, adv. - INFANTICIDE
The murder of an infant born alive; the murder or killing of a newly born or young child; child murder. (more info) antis, child + caedere to kill: cf. F. infanticide. See Infant, and - UNBEGUILE
To set free from the influence of guile; to undeceive. "Then unbeguile thyself." Donne. - SELF-DELUSION
The act of deluding one's self, or the state of being thus deluded. - ROMANTICAL
Romantic.