treachery

  • 31treachery — n. Perfidiousness, perfidy, faithlessness, double dealing, foul play, infidelity, betrayal, treason, disloyalty, breach of faith, Punic faith, insidiousness, deceitfulness …

    New dictionary of synonyms

  • 32treachery — n treason, betrayal, violation of faith; treasonableness, traitorousness, bad faith, disloyalty, unloyalty, perfidy, perfidiousness, faithlessness, unfaithfulness, recreance, recreancy; infidelity, Sl. two timing, cheating, double dealing,… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 33treachery — treach·ery …

    English syllables

  • 34treachery — [ˈtretʃəri] noun [U] the act of harming people who trusted you …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 35treachery — treach•er•y [[t]ˈtrɛtʃ ə ri[/t]] n. pl. er•ies 1) violation of faith; betrayal of trust 2) an act of perfidy, faithlessness, or treason • Etymology: 1175–1225; ME trecherie < OF, =trech(ier) to deceive + erie ery …

    From formal English to slang

  • 36treachery — /ˈtrɛtʃəri / (say trechuhree) noun (plural treacheries) 1. violation of faith; betrayal of trust; treason. 2. an act of perfidy or faithlessness. 3. readiness to betray. {Middle English trecherie, from Old French, from tricher cheat; origin… …

  • 37treachery — Deliberate and wilful betrayal of trust and confidence …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 38treachery — n. (pl. ies) 1 violation of faith or trust; betrayal. 2 an instance of this …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 39Treachery Bay — /trɛtʃəri ˈbeɪ/ (say trechuhree bay) noun an inlet on the eastern shore of Joseph Bonaparte Gulf, NT. {named by marine surveyor JL Stokes (1812–85), commemorating an incident in which he was wounded by an Aboriginal spear} …

  • 40The Treachery of Images — Artist René Magritte Year 1928–29 (1928–29) Type Oil on canvas Dimensions 63.5 …

    Wikipedia