cheating

IPA: tʃˈitɪŋ

noun

  • An act of deception, fraud, trickery, imposture, imposition or infidelity.
  • (cinematography) The arrangement of people or items in a film so as to give the (false) impression that shots are taken from different angles in the same location.

adjective

  • Unsporting or underhand.
  • Unfaithful or adulterous.
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Examples of "cheating" in Sentences

  • "My reference to the word cheating was an inappropriate term to use," he said.
  • For to himself, to his own thinking, that which we call cheating was not dishonesty.
  • Mr Evans said: "My reference to the word cheating was an inappropriate term to use," he said.
  • A Democratic senator who blasts the White House for failing to take on what he calls cheating China.
  • "The alleged use of the word 'cheating' appears to have been injudicious, as well as inaccurate; we shall investigate this further."
  • And if calling a relationship "open" takes the term cheating and turns it into "being free," think swingers then maybe its not such a bad idea after all.
  • Mousavi, himself, has written an open letter to the people of Iran, congratulating them for their high and historic turnout and condemning what he calls the cheating, the official manipulation of the results.
  • Under pressure from the right-wing press to call those who fiddle benefits "cheats" literally, there have been tabloid articles demanding to know why he will not use the word "cheating" to describe welfare fraud, Mr Miliband laid into the whole benefit system in a way that would not raise too many eyebrows at a Conservative conference:

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synonyms for cheatingdescribing words for cheating
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