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  2. The meaning of DECEITFUL is having a tendency or disposition to deceive or give false impressions. How to use deceitful in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Deceitful.

  3. dishonest or hiding the truth: deceitful behaviour. He never struck me as deceitful before. See. deceit. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples. deceiving others and not telling the truth. dishonest The press called out the campaign's dishonest tactics.

  4. Deceitful means intended to or tending to deceive —to lie, mislead, or otherwise hide or distort the truth. The noun deceit most commonly refers to the act or practice of deceiving, but it can also refer to the quality of someone or something that deceives.

  5. adjective. If you say that someone is deceitful, you mean that they behave in a dishonest way by making other people believe something that is not true. They claimed the government had been deceitful. The ambassador called the report deceitful and misleading.

  6. Then you're deceitful — someone who's untrustworthy, two-faced, or fraudulent. Being called deceitful is not a compliment: deceitful words are misleading and deceitful people tend to lie or deceive others. You can say a corrupt business is deceitful, and a two-faced politician is deceitful.

  7. Define deceitful. deceitful synonyms, deceitful pronunciation, deceitful translation, English dictionary definition of deceitful. adj. 1. Given to cheating or deceiving. 2. Deliberately misleading; deceptive. See Synonyms at dishonest. de·ceit′ful·ly adv. de·ceit′ful·ness n.

  8. dishonest or illegal methods used by a person or organization in order to get something or to make people believe that something is true when it is not: The company filed a legal claim alleging deceit and breach of contract. (Definition of deceit from the Cambridge Business English Dictionary © Cambridge University Press) Examples of deceit. deceit

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