Trick TRICK, n. [L. tricor, to play tricks, to trifle, to baffle. We
see the same root in the Low L. intrico, to fold, and in intrigue. Trick
is from drawing, that is, a drawing aside, or a folding, interweaving,
implication.] 1. An artifice or stratagem for the purpose of
deception; a fraudful contrivance for an evil purpose, or an underhand
scheme to impose upon the world; a cheat or cheating. We hear of tricks in
bargains, and tricks of state. He comes to me for counsel, and I show
him a trick. 2. A dexterous artifice. On one nice trick depends
the gen'ral fate. 3. Vicious practice; as the tricks of youth.
4. The sly artifice or legerdemain of a juggler; as the tricks of a merry
Andrew. 5. A collection of cards laid together. 6. An unexpected
event. Some trick not worth an egg. [Unusual.] 7. A particular
habit or manner; as, he has a trick of drumming with his fingers, or a
trick of frowning. [This word is in common use in America, and by no means
vulgar.] TRICK, v.t. To deceive; to impose on; to defraud;
to cheat; as, to trick another in the sale of a horse. TRICK,
v.t. To dress; to decorate; to set off; to adorn fantastically.
Trick her off in air. It is often followed by up, off, or out.
People are lavish in tricking up their children in fine clothes, yet
starve their minds. TRICK, v.i. To live by deception and fraud.
trick I. nounEtymology: Middle English trikke, from Anglo-French
*trik, from trikier to deceive, cheat, from Vulgar Latin
*triccare, alteration of Latin tricari to behave evasively,
shuffle, from tricae complications, trifles Date: 15th
century 1.a. a crafty procedure or practice meant to deceive or defraud
b. a mischievous act ;prankc. an indiscreet
or childish action d. a deceptive, dexterous, or ingenious feat;
especially one designed to puzzle or amuse <a juggler's
tricks>
2.a. a habitual peculiarity of behavior or manner <a
horse with the trick of shying> b. a characteristic
and identifying feature <a trick of speech> c. a
delusive appearance especially when caused by art or legerdemain ;
an optical illusion <a mere trick of the light>
3.a.(1) a quick or artful way of getting a result ;knack
<the trick is to make it look natural> (2) an
instance of getting a desired result <one small adjustment will do
the trick>
b. a technical device (as of an art or craft) <the
tricks of stage technique> 4. the cards played in
one round of a card game often used as a scoring unit 5.a. a turn of duty at the helm usually lasting for two hours b.shift 4b(1) c. a trip taken as part of one's employment d.
a sexual act performed by a prostitute <turning tricks>;
alsojohn 2
6. an attractive child or woman <a cute little trick>
Synonyms:trick, ruse, stratagem, maneuver, artifice, wile, feint
mean an indirect means to gain an end. trick may imply deception,
roguishness, illusion, and either an evil or harmless end <the
tricks of the trade>. ruse stresses an attempt to mislead by a
false impression <the ruses of smugglers>. stratagem implies
a ruse used to entrap, outwit, circumvent, or surprise an opponent or enemy
<the stratagem-filled game>. maneuver suggests adroit and
skillful avoidance of difficulty <last-minute maneuvers to avert
bankruptcy>. artifice implies ingenious contrivance or invention <the
clever artifices of the stage>. wile suggests an attempt to
entrap or deceive with false allurements <used all of his wiles
to ingratiate himself>. feint implies a diversion or distraction of
attention away from one's real intent <a feint toward the enemy's
left flank>. II. transitive verbDate: circa 1500 1. to dress or adorn fancifully or ornately
;ornament <tricked out in a gaudy uniform>
2. to deceive by cunning or artifice ;cheatIII. adjectiveDate: circa 1530 1.trig2.a. of or relating to or involving tricks or trickery
<trick photography> <trick dice> b.
skilled in or used for tricks <a trick horse>
3.a. somewhat defective and unreliable <a trick
lock> b. inclined to give way unexpectedly <a trick
knee>
trick n. & v. --n. 1 an action or scheme undertaken to fool, outwit, or deceive. 2 an optical or other illusion (a trick of the light). 3 a special technique; a knack or special way of
doing something. 4 a a feat of skill or dexterity. b an unusual action (e.g. begging) learned by an animal. 5 a mischievous, foolish, or discreditable act; a practical joke (a mean trick to
play). 6 a peculiar or characteristic habit or mannerism (has a trick of repeating himself). 7 a the cards played in a single round of a card-game, usu. one from each player. b such a round. c
a point gained as a result of this. 8 (attrib.) done to deceive or mystify or to create an illusion (trick photography; trick question). 9 Naut. a sailor's turn at the helm, usu. two
hours. --v.tr. 1 deceive by a trick; outwit. 2 (often foll. by out of, or into + verbal noun) cheat; treat deceitfully so as to deprive (were tricked into agreeing; were tricked out of their
savings). 3 (of a thing) foil or baffle; take by surprise; disappoint the calculations of. Phrases and idioms: do the trick colloq. accomplish one's purpose; achieve the required
result. how's tricks? colloq. how are you? not miss a trick see MISS(1). trick cyclist 1 a cyclist who performs tricks, esp. in a circus. 2 sl. a psychiatrist. trick of the trade a special
usu. ingenious technique or method of achieving a result in an industry or profession etc. trick or treat esp. US a children's custom of calling at houses at Hallowe'en with the threat of pranks if
they are not given a small gift. trick out (or up) dress, decorate, or deck out esp. showily. up to one's tricks colloq. misbehaving. up to a person's tricks aware of what a person is likely to do
by way of mischief. Derivatives: tricker n. trickish adj. trickless adj. Etymology: ME f. OF dial. trique, OF triche f. trichier deceive, of unkn. orig.
trick
(tricks, tricking, tricked)Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1. A trick is an action that is intended to deceive someone.
We are playing a trick on a man who keeps bothering me.N-COUNT
2. If someone tricks you, they deceive you, often in order to make you do something.
Stephen is going to be pretty upset when he finds out how you tricked him...His family tricked him into going to Pakistan, and once he was there, they took away
his passport...His real purpose is to trick his way into your home to see what he can steal.VERB: V n, V n into -ing/n, V way prep/adv
3. A trick is a clever or skilful action that someone does in order to entertain people.
He shows me card tricks.N-COUNT
4. A trick is a clever way of doing something.
Tiffany revamped her sitting room with simple decorative tricks.N-COUNT
5.
see alsoconfidence trick, conjuring trick, hat-trick
6. If something does the trick, it achieves what you wanted. (INFORMAL)
Sometimes a few choice words will do the trick.PHRASE: V inflects
7. If someone tries every trick in the book, they try every possible thing that they
can think of in order to achieve something. (INFORMAL)
Companies are using every trick in the book to stay one step in front of their
competitors.PHRASE: v PHR
8. If you say that something is a trick of the light, you mean that what you are seeing
is an effect caused by the way that the light falls on things, and does not really exist in
the way that it appears.
Her head appears to be on fire but that is only a trick of the light.PHRASE: v-link PHR
9. If you say that someone does not miss a trick, you mean that they always know what
is happening and take advantage of every situation. (INFORMAL)
PHRASE: V inflects, with brd-neg
10. The tricks of the trade are the quick and clever ways of doing something that are
known by people who regularly do a particular activity.
PHRASE: trick inflects
11. If you say that someone is up to their tricks or up to their old
tricks, you disapprove of them because they are behaving in the dishonest or deceitful
way in which they typically behave. (INFORMAL)
I have no respect for my father who, having remarried, is still up to his old tricks.PHRASE: v-link PHR [disapproval]
trick
trɪk n. & v. --n. 1 an action or scheme undertaken to fool, outwit,
or deceive. 2 an optical or other illusion (a trick of the light). 3 a special
technique; a knack or special way of doing something. 4 a a feat of skill
or dexterity. b an unusual action (e.g. begging) learned by an animal. 5 a
mischievous, foolish, or discreditable act; a practical joke (a mean trick
to play). 6 a peculiar or characteristic habit or mannerism (has a trick of
repeating himself). 7 a the cards played in a single round of a card-game,
usu. one from each player. b such a round. c a point gained as a result
of this. 8 (attrib.) done to deceive or mystify or to create an illusion
(trick photography; trick question). 9 Naut. a sailor's turn at the helm,
usu. two hours. --v.tr. 1 deceive by a trick; outwit. 2 (often foll. by out
of, or into + verbal noun) cheat; treat deceitfully so as to deprive (were
tricked into agreeing; were tricked out of their savings). 3 (of a thing)
foil or baffle; take by surprise; disappoint the calculations of. ødo the
trick colloq. accomplish one's purpose; achieve the required result. how's
tricks? colloq. how are you? not miss a trick see MISS(1). trick cyclist 1 a
cyclist who performs tricks, esp. in a circus. 2 sl. a psychiatrist. trick
of the trade a special usu. ingenious technique or method of achieving a
result in an industry or profession etc. trick or treat esp. US a children's
custom of calling at houses at Hallowe'en with the threat of pranks if
they are not given a small gift. trick out (or up) dress, decorate, or deck
out esp. showily. up to one's tricks colloq. misbehaving. up to a person's
tricks aware of what a person is likely to do by way of mischief. øøtricker
n. trickish adj. trickless adj. [ME f. OF dial. trique, OF triche f. trichier
deceive, of unkn. orig.]
Trick \Trick\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Tricked; p. pr. & vb. n.
Tricking.]
1. To deceive by cunning or artifice; to impose on; to
defraud; to cheat; as, to trick another in the sale of a
horse.
2. To dress; to decorate; to set off; to adorn fantastically;
-- often followed by up, off, or out. `` Trick her off in
air.'' --Pope.
People lavish it profusely in tricking up their
children in fine clothes, and yet starve their
minds. --Locke.
They are simple, but majestic, records of the
feelings of the poet; as little tricked out for the
public eye as his diary would have been. --Macaulay.
3. To draw in outline, as with a pen; to delineate or
distinguish without color, as arms, etc., in heraldry.
They forget that they are in the statutes: . . .
there they are tricked, they and their pedigrees.
--B. Jonson.
Trick \Trick\, n. [D. trek a pull, or drawing, a trick, trekken
to draw; akin to LG. trekken, MHG. trecken, trechen, Dan.
tr[ae]kke, and OFries. trekka. Cf. Track, Trachery,
Trig, a., Trigger.]
1. An artifice or stratagem; a cunning contrivance; a sly
procedure, usually with a dishonest intent; as, a trick in
trade.
trick
trɪk n.
1 ruse, artifice, device, stratagem, wile, deception, manoeuvre, deceit, fraud, hoax,
imposture, intrigue, machination, conspiracy, subterfuge, dodge, confidence trick, sham, Slang
con: The government's 'dirty tricks squad' perpetrated crimes against their political adversaries.
2 prank, frolic, antic, (practical) joke, hoax, tomfoolery, antic, caper, jape; sport,
horseplay, mischief; Scots cantrip, Colloq leg-pull, gag, shenanigans, US dido: The boys meant
no harm, they're just up to their tricks.
3 art, knack, technique, skill, secret, gift, ability, Colloq hang: He has developed
the trick of persuading people to buy life insurance.
4 Usually, no mean trick. feat, accomplishment, deed: It was no mean trick to train a
cat to fetch his slippers.
5 sleight of hand, legerdemain, magic, stunt: I have taught him all the tricks I know.
6 trait, characteristic, peculiarity, idiosyncrasy, eccentricity, quirk, practice, habit,
mannerism, crotchet, weakness, foible: He has an odd trick of winking while giving a sly smile.
7 do the trick. work, answer, fulfil the need, suffice, be effective, solve or take
care of the problem, do or accomplish the necessary, US turn the trick, Colloq fill the bill:
Replacing the battery cable did the trick. --v.
8 fool, hoodwink, dupe, mislead, outwit, outmanoeuvre, deceive, misguide, misinform, gull,
bilk, cheat, defraud, cozen, take in, swindle, humbug, Colloq bamboozle, take, put something
over on (someone), pull the wool over (someone's) eyes, Brit gammon, Slang rook: I knew I had
been tricked when I missed my wallet. For years the couple made a living tricking tourists out
of their money. She tricked me into taking her to dinner. --adj.
9 See tricky, 3, below.
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