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Definition of foil verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

foil

verb
 
/fɔɪl/
 
/fɔɪl/
[often passive]
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they foil
 
/fɔɪl/
 
/fɔɪl/
he / she / it foils
 
/fɔɪlz/
 
/fɔɪlz/
past simple foiled
 
/fɔɪld/
 
/fɔɪld/
past participle foiled
 
/fɔɪld/
 
/fɔɪld/
-ing form foiling
 
/ˈfɔɪlɪŋ/
 
/ˈfɔɪlɪŋ/
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  1. to stop something from happening, especially something illegal; to prevent somebody from doing something synonym thwart
    • foil something to foil a plan/crime/plot
    • Customs officials foiled an attempt to smuggle the paintings out of the country.
    • foil somebody (in something) They were foiled in their attempt to smuggle the paintings.
    Extra Examples
    • The burglary was foiled by a passer-by who called the police.
    • The registration plates are designed to foil police speed traps.
    Word Originverb Middle English (in the sense ‘trample down’): perhaps from Old French fouler ‘to full cloth, trample’, based on Latin fullo ‘fuller’.
See foil in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
indeed
adverb
 
 
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