- de|lud|ing|ly
- de|lud|ing|ly «dih LOO dihng lee», adverb.in a way so as to delude.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
lud — de·lud·er; de·lud·ing·ly; lud·lam·ite; lud·lo·vi·an; Lud·low; lud·wig·ia; lud·wig·ite; lud·wig s; lud·wigs·ha·fen; lud·vig·ia; … English syllables
lud- — *lud germ., Verb: nhd. wachsen ( Verb) (1); ne. grow (Verb); Hinweis: s. *ludēn, *ludja ; Etymologie: s. ing. *leudʰ (1), *h₁leudʰ , Verb, wachsen ( … Germanisches Wörterbuch
col|lud´er — col|lude «kuh LOOD», intransitive verb, lud|ed, lud|ing. to act together through a secret understanding; conspire in a fraud. SYNONYM(S): plot, connive. ╂[< Latin collūdere < com with + lūdere to play < lūdus game] –col|lud´er, noun … Useful english dictionary
deludingly — de·lud·ing·ly … English syllables
DE — DE; de·acetylate; de·acidification; de·acidify; de·activate; de·a·dose; de·aerate; de·af·fer·en·ta·tion; de·alate; de·alat·ed; de·al·bate; de·alkalization; de·alkalize; de·alkylate; de·am·bu·la·tion; de·ambulatory; de·amidate; de·amidization;… … English syllables
delude — de•lude [[t]dɪˈlud[/t]] v. t. lud•ed, lud•ing 1) to mislead the mind or judgment of 2) Obs. to frustrate 3) Obs. to elude • Etymology: 1400–50; late ME < L dēlūdere to dupe =dē de +lūdere to play de•lud′er, n … From formal English to slang
elude — e•lude [[t]ɪˈlud[/t]] v. t. e•lud•ed, e•lud•ing 1) to avoid capture or escape detection by; evade 2) to escape the perception or comprehension of: His popularity eludes me[/ex] • Etymology: 1530–40; < L ēlūdere to deceive, evade =ē e +lūdere… … From formal English to slang
collude — col·lude /kə lüd/ vi col·lud·ed, col·lud·ing: to agree or cooperate secretly for a fraudulent or otherwise illegal purpose Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. collude … Law dictionary
delude — de·lude di lüd vt, de·lud·ed; de·lud·ing to mislead the mind or judgment of … Medical dictionary
allude — al•lude [[t]əˈlud[/t]] v. i. lud•ed, lud•ing to refer casually or indirectly; make an allusion (usu. fol. by to): to allude to one s childhood[/ex] • Etymology: 1525–35; < L allūdere to play beside, make a playful allusion to … From formal English to slang