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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
pretext
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
find
▪ It was impossible to find any pretext for remaining in her company.
▪ Within moments, Alison had found a pretext to excuse herself.
give
▪ Opposition leaders are afraid to give Milosevic the pretext to use more brutality and proclaim martial law or something along those lines.
▪ Even one counterexample would give us a pretext to bring the rogue in for questioning.
provide
▪ Armed clashes between farmers and squatters that led to deaths could provide the pretext.
▪ The incident also appeared to provide a pretext for the government to institute harsher measures against the student demonstrators.
use
▪ However, this can not be used as a pretext to justify inertia.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ He used to spend hours at her house on the pretext of giving her Japanese lessons.
▪ His sore leg was a pretext. He just wanted a day off work.
▪ Minor offences were sometimes used as a pretext for an arrest.
▪ She couldn't find a pretext to visit Derek at home.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Every adverse employment decision is a pretext for litigation.
▪ He can't recall the man's story but clearly it was a pretext for his accomplice to search the house.
▪ He could of course simply walk out on some pretext - visiting a friend.
▪ I lingered, on the pretext of finishing half a glass of champagne.
▪ One pretext disposed of, McClellan found another.
▪ People were moving more slowly and nonchalantly, without the pretext of a destination or purpose.
▪ The boy was simply a beggar: his bundle of newspapers was a pretext, and we called him the Newspaper Boy.
▪ What bothers us more is the seeming predisposition of the federal courts to strike down term-limit laws on just about any pretext.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Pretext

Pretext \Pre"text\ (?; 277), n. [F. pr['e]texte, L. praetextum, fr. praetextus, p. p. of praetexere to weave before, allege as an excuse; prae before + texere to weave. See Text.] Ostensible reason or motive assigned or assumed as a color or cover for the real reason or motive; pretense; disguise.

They suck the blood of those they depend on, under a pretext of service and kindness.
--L'Estrange.

With how much or how little pretext of reason.
--Dr. H. More.

Syn: Pretense; excuse; semblance; disguise; appearance. See Pretense.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
pretext

1510s, from French prétexte, from Latin praetextum "a pretext, outward display," noun use of neuter past participle of praetexere "to disguise, cover," literally "weave in front" (for sense, compare pull the wool over (someone's) eyes); from prae- "in front" (see pre-) + texere "to weave," from PIE root *teks- "to weave, to make" (see texture (n.)).

Wiktionary
pretext

n. A false, contrived, or assumed purpose or reason; a pretense. vb. To employ a pretext, which involves using a false or contrived purpose for soliciting the gain of something else.

WordNet
pretext
  1. n. something serving to conceal plans; a fictitious reason that is concocted in order to conceal the real reason [syn: stalking-horse]

  2. an artful or simulated semblance; "under the guise of friendship he betrayed them" [syn: guise, pretense, pretence]

Wikipedia
Pretext

A pretext (adj: pretextual) is an excuse to do something or say something that is not accurate. Pretexts may be based on a half-truth or developed in the context of a misleading fabrication. Pretexts have been used to conceal the true purpose or rationale behind actions and words.

In US law, a pretext usually describes false reasons that hide the true intentions or motivations for a legal action. If a party can establish a prima facie case for the proffered evidence, the opposing party must prove that these reasons were "pretextual" or false. This can be accomplished by directly demonstrating that the motivations behind the presentation of evidence is false, or indirectly by evidence that the motivations are not "credible". In Griffith v. Schnitzer, an employment discrimination case, a jury award was reversed by a Court of Appeals because the evidence was not sufficient that the defendant's reasons were "pretextual". That is, the defendant's evidence was either undisputed, or the plaintiff's was "irrelevant subjective assessments and opinions".

A "pretextual" arrest by law enforcement officers is one carried out for illegal purposes such as to conduct an unjustified search and seizure.

As one example of pretext, in the 1880s, the Chinese government raised money on the pretext of modernizing the Chinese navy. Instead, these funds were diverted to repair a ship-shaped, two-story pavilion which had been originally constructed for the mother of the Qianlong Emperor. This pretext and the Marble Barge are famously linked with Empress Dowager Cixi. This architectural folly, known today as the Marble Boat (Shifang), is "moored" on Lake Kunming in what the empress renamed the "Garden for Cultivating Harmony" (Yiheyuan).

Another example of pretext was demonstrated in the speeches of the Roman orator Cato the Elder (234-149 BC). For Cato, every public speech became a pretext for a comment about Carthage. The Roman statesman had come to believe that the prosperity of ancient Carthage represented an eventual and inevitable danger to Rome. In the Senate, Cato famously ended every speech by proclaiming his opinion that Carthage had to be destroyed ( Carthago delenda est). This oft-repeated phrase was the ultimate conclusion of all logical argument in every oration, regardless of the subject of the speech. This pattern persisted until his death in 149, which was the year in which the Third Punic War began. In other words, any subject became a pretext for reminding his fellow senators of the dangers Carthage represented.

Usage examples of "pretext".

Quite unintentionally, he himself had been partly the cause of the murder, but only partly, and when he learned that he had given a pretext to the murderers, he became anguished, stupefied, began imagining things, went quite off his head, and convinced himself that he was the murderer!

In these passages cited above we can see sketched the premises and pretexts of that anthropocentric war.

There are common barrators among doctors as there are among lawyers, --stirrers up of strife under one pretext and another, but in reality because they like it.

Less than ten days earlier, a martinet of a Chief Commissioner, who did not approve of inspectors of the old school, had asked him to resign--to retire early, as he more elegantly put it--on the pretext of some rash act the Superintendent was supposed to have committed.

I thought you adorable, and the remembrance of you took such a hold on me that I longed to see you again, and so I made use of that fool Morin as a pretext, and here I am.

America, but the Parlementaire orator was able to represent it as an imposition that would strike the great and humble alike, festooning tradesmen, booksellers, shopkeepers and guildsmen in reams of paper, and which would furnish yet another pretext for the heavy hand of government to press on the shoulder of defenseless citizens.

The silly pretext of difficulties by which my erasure, notwithstanding the reiterated solicitations of the victorious General, was so long delayed made me apprehensive of a renewal, under a weak and jealous pentarchy, of the horrible scenes of 1796.

Henry Hunt and others, met in Spa-fields on the 10th of February, under the pretext of petitioning for parliamentary reform.

What I do plan to do, incidentally, is slip away under the pretext of being called to a top-level conference on the redeployment of personnel from here and the selection of a substitute base-location, and by the time they finish investigating the circumstances I should have the rope braided to hang Quist by the neck.

Moscow- was suggested to the Emperor, and accepted by him, as a pretext for quitting the army.

Dickmann authorized large-scale ratissages looting of French towns under the pretext of searching for Maquis suspects, but in reality looking for gold.

And the much-vaunted plan of mine for redeveloping the ground below the monorail central was nothing more than a governmental pretext to kick out Sigueiras.

Prince Ferdinand is placed with regard to the Portuguese people, and the great suspicion with which all foreigners he brought here into his service are viewed, renders it necessary that the utmost caution, should be observed by the English residing in Portugal with respect to private interviews either with her most faithful majesty or her august consort, that neither the government nor the people may have a pretext for entertaining any undue impressions of the intentions of England.

Teresa showed to him that she was a worthy daughter of Eve, and he returned to the forest, pausing several times on his way, under the pretext of saluting his protectors.

Miller got ahold of some videotape of Jennie signing on some pretext and then analyzed it.