Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- transitive verb To bamboozle; deceive.
from The Century Dictionary.
- To humbug; bamboozle; bedevil.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- verb transitive To
deceive ortrick .
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- verb deprive of by deceit
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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The state's open meetings law was designed to ensure that the public is aware of government action and that lawmakers aren't able to convene in secret and hornswoggle voters.
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Cy was exultant after watching Ed, my club's best player, hornswoggle a good declarer out of a vulnerable game.
Bridge Frank Stewart 2010
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But don't forget, boys, when you-all want me to hornswoggle Wall
Chapter IV 2010
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The state's open meetings law was designed to ensure that the public is aware of government action and that lawmakers aren't able to convene in secret and hornswoggle voters.
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Rather than producing hogwash and hornswoggle, maybe he can bring some cold, hard facts instead of this torqued rhetoric.
Your Daily Dose Of Afghanistan « Unambiguously Ambidextrous 2008
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Reagan helped the GOP hornswoggle the working and middle classes but the bloom is off the rose and the emperor has no clothes.
Has There Been a Political Realignment? - Paper Cuts Blog - NYTimes.com 2009
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Either the AP is having extraordinary difficulty in communicating its intent, or it is trying to hornswoggle you and Chittum.
What The Associated Press’ tracking beacon is — and what it isn’t » Nieman Journalism Lab 2009
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This too easily can yield to the aggressively anti-democratic machinations of neo-conservatism -- the belief that an excellent few have license to hornswoggle the rest of us into projects that benefit the decision-makers.
"Straight-Talking" McCain Pushes Phony GOP Attack On Kerry 2009
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What will happen next time some administration tries to hornswoggle the nation into an unjust war?
Gregory To Tony Snow: "What's An Appropriate Way To Dissent"? 2009
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It's not surprising that one of PwC's lead lobbyists in this effort to hornswoggle the taxpayers is former Rep. Bill Archer -- a vehement foe of the earned income tax credit (which benefits low-income people).
Charlie Cray: Those wacky supply-siders are at it again! 2008
whichbe commented on the word hornswoggle
Bamboozle or hoax; cheat or swindle. "We’re hornswoggled. We’re backed to a standstill. We’re double-crossed to a fare-you-well" bitterly complains a character in Jack London’s The Valley of the Moon of 1913. Seven years later the young P G Wodehouse used it in Little Warrior: "Would she have the generosity to realize that a man ought not to be held accountable for what he says in the moment when he discovers that he has been cheated, deceived, robbed — in a word, hornswoggled?" By then, the word had been in the language with that meaning for more than half a century, and even then it had been around for some decades with an older sense of "embarrass, disconcert or confuse". People had long since turned it into an exclamation of surprise or amazement: "Well, I’ll be hornswoggled!"
Peter Watts argues in A Dictionary of the Old West that it comes from cowpunching. A steer that has been lassoed around the neck will "hornswoggle", wag and twist its head around frantically to try to slip free of the rope. A cowboy who lets the animal get away with this is said to have been "hornswoggled". A nice idea, but nobody seems to have heard of hornswoggle in the cattle sense, and it may be a guess based on horn. Nobody else has much idea either, though it’s often assumed to be one of those highfalutin words like absquatulate and rambunctious that frontier Americans were so fond of creating. It’s sad to have to tag a word as "origin unknown" yet again, but that’s the long and the short of it.
(from World Wide Words)
May 21, 2008