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Answer for the clue "Underhand behaviour ", 8 letters:
trickery

Alternative clues for the word trickery

Word definitions for trickery in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ He's managed to get as far as he has through slick talking and trickery . ▪ It was a piece of political trickery that enraged the opposition. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ But in a multicurrency society, the citizens could hedge ...

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1719, from trick (v.) + -ery .

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context uncountable English) deception or underhanded behavior. 2 (context uncountable English) The art of dress up; imposture. 3 (context uncountable English) artifice; the use of one or more stratagems.

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Trickery \Trick"er*y\, n. The art of dressing up; artifice; stratagem; fraud; imposture.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. verbal misrepresentation intended to take advantage of you in some way [syn: hocus-pocus , slickness , hanky panky , jiggery-pokery , skulduggery , skullduggery ] the use of tricks to deceive someone (usually to extract money from them) [syn: chicanery ...

Usage examples of trickery.

With the chaos created by the emergence of this new Bedlam, there has been too much trickery, too much treachery.

Even if he took the posters off it, even the canvas cover, people would see him for a traveller, a seller, quack, musician or a mountebank, but if he left it and just took the nag, he gave up his home, his bed, and all his trade trickery.

We were shot out indiscriminately into the trickery of the slippery, rampaging decade, and the best we could do was cover our eyes and ears and genitalia like pangolins or armadillos and make sure that our soft underbellies were not exposed for either inspection or slaughter.

Whoever faced a Roman gladiator under the critical gaze of a crowd that knew all the points of fighting and could instantly detect, and did instantly resent pretense, fraud, trickery, the poor condition of one combatant or the unwillingness of one man to have at another in deadly earnest, had to be not only in the pink of bodily condition but a fighter such as no drunken sensualist could ever hope to be.

But there has been so much trickery in the sale of trusses and other things for rupture that it is only in justice to ourselves that we mention our reputation.

Nearly six lithe feet of her, and unmistakably great handloomed tweeds in conservative cut, lizard purse and walking shoes and hair chestnut-brown and gleaming with health, styled with no trickery, bobbing to her resolute stride, and one gloved finger hooked through the string of a parcel wrapped in gold foil paper, and on her mouth a lovely secret smile, perhaps part memory, part anticipation, and part appreciation of the day and of the good feel of taking long strides, and part being lovely and young.

I saw Father Secchi, an anecdote I had heard, no way to his credit,--except for ingenious trickery.

You still intend to employ trickery to convince the Briamosites that the box is unopened and untouched?

It is the avidity of the dupes which induces the trickery of the sharpers.

It gentled his face, and I turned my eyes from him, not wanting to fall for such trickery.

She struck an over-solemn pose and told the tribe she would tell of a time, last spring, when she and her soestre had, by trickery, parted the women of Singing Pastures from the possession of four sacks of grain, a sack of dap, and a saddle.

The Squire smiled cunningly at his companions and dipped again into the barrel as Bufo shouted, “Pickle trickery!

And although we gave no occasion to this wickedness of the popes, and did not understand their false aims and purposes, nevertheless, through this papal trickery and roguery, we have already paid too dearly for our empire, with incalculable bloodshed, with the suppression of our liberty, with the risk of robbery of all our goods, especially the goods of the churches and canonries, and with the suffering of unspeakable deception and insult.

You see, it wasn't something that could be circumvented with a bit of technical trickery.

Months of preparation, secret coordinations, meetings, councils of war, spies, trickery, subterfuge-finally!