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

hoodwink

verb
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋk/
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋk/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they hoodwink
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋk/
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋk/
he / she / it hoodwinks
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋks/
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋks/
past simple hoodwinked
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋkt/
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋkt/
past participle hoodwinked
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋkt/
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋkt/
-ing form hoodwinking
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋkɪŋ/
 
/ˈhʊdwɪŋkɪŋ/
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  1. hoodwink somebody (into doing something) to trick somebody
    • She had been hoodwinked into buying a worthless necklace.
    • I feel as if I’ve been hoodwinked.
    • Staff felt as if they had been hoodwinked when they discovered the new management’s plans.
    Word Originmid 16th cent. (originally in the sense ‘to blindfold’): from the noun hood ‘covering’ + an obsolete sense of wink ‘close the eyes’.
See hoodwink in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
trait
noun
 
 
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