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
cheat·a·ble,adjectivecheat·ing·ly,adverboutcheat,verb (used with object)un·cheat·ed,adjective
This comes in part from the fact that the Cullinan has a cheat sheet.
The first Rolls-Royce SUV has tricks that might actually justify its price tag|Dan Carney|October 5, 2020|Popular Science
They were salt-packed and full of “preservatives” and that ghastly enemy, MSG, but more than anything, they were the tools of cheats.
The Redemption of the Spice Blend|Jaya Saxena|September 10, 2020|Eater
“There should be a cheat sheet out there for what test to use when,” Wells said.
Spit vs. Swab? Scientists say new studies support use of ‘saliva tests’ for COVID|Lee Clifford|September 5, 2020|Fortune
For example, when you’re gearing up for a big promotional launch, create a cheat sheet of pre-written social copy and send over several variations that fit different channels.
Five content promotion strategies SaaS marketers should implement today|Izabelle Hundrev|August 28, 2020|Search Engine Watch
Using that formula, which is a bit of a cheat, e-commerce is now closer to 21%.
E-commerce explodes: 45% growth in Q2|Greg Sterling|August 19, 2020|Search Engine Land
Cheat, in other words—on God, on our fellow man, ultimately, on ourselves.