cheat

[ cheet ]
/ tʃit /

verb (used with object)

verb (used without object)

noun

Origin of cheat

1325–75; Middle English chet (noun) (aphetic for achet, variant of eschet escheat); cheten to escheat, derivative of chet (noun)

synonym study for cheat

1. Cheat, deceive, trick, victimize refer to the use of fraud or artifice deliberately to hoodwink or obtain an unfair advantage over someone. Cheat implies conducting matters fraudulently, especially for profit to oneself: to cheat at cards. Deceive suggests deliberately misleading or deluding, to produce misunderstanding or to prevent someone from knowing the truth: to deceive one's parents. To trick is to deceive by a stratagem, often of a petty, crafty, or dishonorable kind: to trick someone into signing a note. To victimize is to make a victim of; the emotional connotation makes the cheating, deception, or trickery seem particularly dastardly: to victimize a blind man.

OTHER WORDS FROM cheat

British Dictionary definitions for cheat on

cheat
/ (tʃiːt) /

verb

noun

Derived forms of cheat

cheatable, adjective cheater, noun cheatingly, adverb

Word Origin for cheat

C14: short for escheat

Idioms and Phrases with cheat on

cheat on

Be sexually unfaithful to, as in They broke up right after she found he was cheating on her. [Colloquial; 1920s]