hoodwink
verb /ˈhʊdwɪŋk/
  /ˈhʊdwɪŋk/
Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they hoodwink |  /ˈhʊdwɪŋk/  /ˈhʊdwɪŋk/ | 
| he / she / it hoodwinks |  /ˈhʊdwɪŋks/  /ˈhʊdwɪŋks/ | 
| past simple hoodwinked |  /ˈhʊdwɪŋkt/  /ˈhʊdwɪŋkt/ | 
| past participle hoodwinked |  /ˈhʊdwɪŋkt/  /ˈhʊdwɪŋkt/ | 
| -ing form hoodwinking |  /ˈhʊdwɪŋkɪŋ/  /ˈhʊdwɪŋkɪŋ/ | 
- hoodwink somebody (into doing something) to trick somebody- She had been hoodwinked into buying a worthless necklace.
- I feel as if I’ve been hoodwinked.
- Staff felt as if they had been hoodwinked when they discovered the new management’s plans.
 Word Originmid 16th cent. (originally in the sense ‘to blindfold’): from the noun hood ‘covering’ + an obsolete sense of wink ‘close the eyes’.