Crossword clues for subterfuge
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Subterfuge \Sub"ter*fuge\, n. [F., from LL. subterfugium, fr. L. subterfugere to flee secretly, to escape; subter under + fugere to flee. See Fugitive.] That to which one resorts for escape or concealment; an artifice employed to escape censure or the force of an argument, or to justify opinions or conduct; a shift; an evasion.
Affect not little shifts and subterfuges, to avoid the
force of an argument.
--I. Watts.
By a miserable subterfuge, they hope to render this
position safe by rendering it nugatory.
--Burke.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1570s, from Middle French subterfuge (14c.) or directly from Medieval Latin subterfugium "an evasion," from Latin subterfugere "to evade, escape, flee by stealth," from subter "beneath, below;" in compounds "secretly" (from PIE *sup-ter-, suffixed (comparative) form of *(s)up-; see sub-) + fugere "flee" (see fugitive (adj.)).
Wiktionary
n. (context countable English) An indirect or deceptive device or stratagem; a blind. Refers especially to war and politics.
WordNet
n. something intended to misrepresent the true nature of an activity; "he wasn't sick--it was just a subterfuge"; "the holding company was just a blind" [syn: blind]
Wikipedia
Subterfuge may refer to:
- Deception
- Subterfuge (film), a 1968 British film.''
- Subterfuge (1912 film), a 1912 American film
- A nickname for the Central Government War Headquarters
- Subterfuge, track from The Hidden Land album by Béla Fleck and the Flecktones
- Subterfuge, track from Demolition (Judas Priest album)
- Subterfuge, track from Black Fire (album)
- Subterfuge, track from Oppressing the Masses
- Subterfuge, track from Run Cold album from Diva Destruction
- Subterfuge, track from Zeno Beach
- Subterfuge, track by Man Is the Bastard
- Subterfuge, a music video by Dååth
- Subterfuge Records, a music label
- The Subterfuge, an episode from The Fatal Ring, a 1917 American action film serial
- "Subterfuge", a 1959 science fiction story by Charles Eric Maine
- "Subterfuge", Ray Bradbury, (Astonishing Stories 1943)
Subterfuge is a 1968 British espionage film directed by Peter Graham Scott and starring Gene Barry, Joan Collins and Richard Todd.
Subterfuge is a 1912 American silent film drama produced by Chauncey D. Herbert. The film stars Adrienne Kroell and Louise Reming. The film was released together with The Geisha Girls of Japan. The film status is uncertain but a release flier survives which is now at the Margaret Herrick Library at the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences.
Usage examples of "subterfuge".
The Culture - the real Culture, the wily ones, not these semi-mystical Elenchers with their miserable hankering to be somebody else - had been known to give whole Affronter fleets the run-around for several months with not dissimilar enticements and subterfuges, keeping them occupied, seemingly on the track of some wildly promising prey which turned out to be nothing at all, or a Culture ship with some ridiculous but earnestly argued excuse, while the Culture or one of its snivelling client species got on - or away - with something else somewhere else, spoiling rightful Affronter fun.
He had an almost psychic power to detect subterfuge, and to place a finger squarely on malingerers or lack-guts.
This was why he boarded Phips in Cheapside without subterfuge or disguise.
While diplomatic language since the age of heralds had habitually used subterfuge, and presupposed distinctions between ostensible and actual intentions that would be read by those to whom its messages were addressed, the language of citizens was meant to be transparently sincere, direct and unmediated.
Sulla was bringing his legion right up the Via Sacra to the gates of the city, with no attempt at subterfuge.
God, suggesting that He was capable of using a cheap subterfuge like the audits to get out of being blamed for how hard economic life was down here.
When our enemies did discover the subterfuge involving young Sir Berit, Zalasta did spirit thy wife and her handmaiden away under cover of darkness.
La Bruyere was charged, and even by Voltaire, with attacking the progress of civilization, and with preferring the rude subterfuges of Carlovingian times to the comforts of 1688.
Considering the crooked sword, the Graeaean subterfuge, the rear-view approaches to Medusa and Cetus, the far-darting Hermean sandals, even the trajectory of the discus that killed Acrisius, would it be fair to generalize that dodge and indirection were my conscious tactics, and, if so, were they characterological or by Athenian directive?
One example of the shameless subterfuges under which the French stand prepared to defend whatever cruelties they may hereafter think fit to commit in bringing the Marquesan natives into subjection is well worthy of being recorded.
He was sent far back, into Brittany, to Quimper, where, a second time, by a subterfuge he contrived to escape from the hospital before his wound was properly healed.
The Wests would go to extraordinary lengths to attract young women, resorting to subterfuge in unexpected ways.
If we further assume that the motive for that nonconvincing subterfuge was to disguise the real assailant, then I suggest that a single assailant deliberately made one set of bloody tracks, walked far enough that all traces of the blood were worn off, then simply doubled back and walked through the blood again.
But a third live birth is still a criminal offense by the woman, no matter what subterfuges she employs.
So much subterfuge, so many secret negotiations-mergers, buyouts, controlling interests.