Subterfuge (noun)
sub-ter-fewj
An artifice or expedient used to evade a rule, escape a consequence, hide something, etc.
First recorded in English around 1565–75 and comes from the Late Latin word subterfugium, which is similar to the Latin word subterfug(ere), meaning “to evade.” Subter means “below,” and fugere, “to flee.”
Example sentences
“His elaborate subterfuge involved creating a fake ID and getting his friend to take the exam for him!”
Gamp (noun) gamp (British) (informal) Umbrella. 1860–65; after the umbrella of Mrs. Sarah Gamp in Dickens' Martin Chuzzlewit (more…)
Marabout (noun) ma-ra-boot (Islam) a hermit or holy man, especially in N Africa, often wielding political power and credited with supernatural powers./ the tomb or shrine of such a man.…
Farrago (noun) far-ah-go A jumbled mixture of things. 1625–35; Latin: literally, mixed crop of feed grains, equivalent to farr- (stem of far ) emmer + -āgō suffix noting kind or…
Firkin (noun) fer-kin a small wooden vessel or tub for butter, lard, etc. First recorded around 1400–50 and comes from the late Middle English word ferdkyn or firdekyn. (more…)
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