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Meaning of ruse | Babel Free

Noun masculine CEFR C2 Specialized
ɹuːz

Definitions

  1. A turning or doubling back, especially of animals to get out of the way of hunting dogs.
    archaic, countable, often, rare
  2. A suburb of Sydney in the Campbelltown council area, New South Wales, Australia.
  3. A surname.
  4. Subterfuge, ruse.
  5. An action intended to deceive; a trick.
    broadly, countable
  6. A city in northeastern Bulgaria.
  7. A suburb in the City of Campbelltown, near Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, named after James Ruse.
  8. Cunning, guile, trickery.
    uncountable
  9. A municipality of Ruse Province, Bulgaria.
  10. A province in Bulgaria.

Equivalents

العربية الحيلة حيلة
Azərbaycanca qurğu
Български Русе хитрост
Bosanski list meo trik truc хитрост
Català ardit truc
Čeština lest trik úskočnost úskok
Cymraeg dichell ystryw
Esperanto ruzo
فارسی کید
Français finasserie ruse rusé rusé
Gàidhlig innleachd mealladh
עברית תחבולה
हिन्दी छल फ़रेब
Hrvatski list meo trik truc хитрост
Magyar csel fortély
Italiano trucco
日本語 計略
ქართული ხრიკი
ಕನ್ನಡ ಕಪಟ
한국어 기계 루세
Kurdî lêst lişt lîst
Македонски измама итрина Русе
Монгол арга шалтаг
ਪੰਜਾਬੀ دا ਦਾ
Română șmecherie
Slovenčina lesť
Српски list meo trik truc хитрост
Svenska knep skenmanöver
ไทย ลูกไม้
Tagalog talimangmang
Tiếng Việt Mèo

Examples

“The boar was evidently most averse to leave the field in which he had spent so may pleasant hours of uninterrupted rest; […] He turned sharply to one flank; he stopped dead, and went away in the opposite direction as he heard the hunters gallop past; every ruse he tried, but tried in vain.”
“Near-synonyms: ploy, stratagem”
“It must be borne in mind that huntsmen sometimes make casts which they know must lose them their fox: […] At the same time, it would be bad policy to explain these little matters: some parties, who are not sufficiently acquainted with the management of hounds, might be discontented, whereas by such a ruse no offence is given, as nine-tenths of the Field are not aware that it is not the most likely cast to recover the scent.”
“He was soon upon his feet, another assegai whistled through the air, and pierced through the neck of the lioness. But, as before, the wound was not fatal, and the animal, now enraged to a frenzy, charged once more upon her assailant. So rapid was her advance that it was with great difficulty Congo got under cover. A moment later, and his ruse would have failed, for the claws of the lion rattled upon the shield as it descended.”
“I have that strong impression on my mind that a person who is guilty of a ruse will hesitate at no falsehood. If it was a ruse, and if it was a deceit, you are to judge whether that elevates the persons in your mind who are parties to that trick.”
“Soon, however, Courvoisier forced matters, when, despairing of ever catching the wily outlaw leader by fair means, he resorted to the ruse of carrying off Friar Tuck of Copmanhurst and holding him as a hostage.”
“Warships, whether surface or submarine, may use ruses and strategems. They may sail under false flags, both enemy and neutral, but before going into action whether at sea or if about to attack a land target they must strike any false colours and raise their own battle colours. It would be perfidy for them to use the red cross or crescent or any other protected emblem in this way.”
“The terminological distinction between reproductive and therapeutic cloning is a semantic ruse, as every instance of human cloning is a true reproducive act. That is to say, the intended purpose of this research is to produce a new human being with human embryonic stem cells.”
“Politics is a dirty business, a ruse, an ideological cul-de-sac, a vast looter of intellectual and financial resources, a lie that corrupts, a deceiver, a means of unleashing vast evil in the world of the most unexpected and undetected sort and the greatest diverter of human productivity ever concocted by those who do not believe in authentic social and economic progress.”
“[H]e [Bertrand du Guesclin] had great natural cunning, that half-savage quality, was full of ruse and trick in war, he was contemptuous towards the high noblesse, but gentle to the poor, and generous to his friends.”
“A French privateer operating under an English commission raided Massacre Island at the mouth of Mobile Bay in 1710, robbing its warehouse of thousands of deerskins and other pelts, as well as of naval stores. They took the small place by ruse.”

CEFR level

C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
See all C2 English words →

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