fraudulent
/ˈfɹɑd͡ʒ.lənt/
UK: /ˈfɹɔːd͡ʒ.lənt/
FɹⱭD͡Ʒ · lənt (2 syllables)
English
Adj Top 23,617
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Definition
Dishonest; based on fraud or deception.
Etymology
From Middle English fraudulent, from Old French fraudulent, from Latin fraudulentus, from fraus (“fraud”).
Example Sentences
- "Secondly, Philoſophy which we are warned not to take heed of : not that Philoſophy, which is true & ſound knowledge attained by naturall diſcourſe of reaſon ; but that Philoſophy which to bolſter hereſie or error, caſteth a fraudulent ſhew of reaſon vpon things which are indeed vnreaſonable, & by that meane as by a ſtratageme ſpoyleth the ſimple which are not able to withſtand ſuch cunning."
- "The only reaſon, why men are not always ſufficiently ſenſible of This ; ſo that Many, who are very Juſt in their Dealings between Man and Man, will yet be very fraudulent or rapacious with regard to the Publick ; is becauſe, in this latter caſe, ’tis not ſo obviouſly and immediately apparent uppon Whom the Injury falls, as it is in the caſe of Private Wrongs."
- "One writer gravely assures us that Maurice of Saxony learned all his fraudulent policy from that execrable volume [The Prince]."
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