Underhanded Definition

вторник 14 апреляadmin

Underhanded: 1 adj marked by deception Synonyms: sneaky, underhand corrupt, crooked not straight; dishonest or immoral or evasive adj with hand brought forward and up from below shoulder level Synonyms: underarm, underhand Antonyms: overarm, overhand, overhanded with hand brought forward and down from above shoulder level round-arm with. Robo fights. Define underhanded. Underhanded synonyms, underhanded pronunciation, underhanded translation, English dictionary definition of underhanded. Acting or done in a deceptive, secret, or sly manner; dishonest and sneaky.

adjective

another term for underhand
Underhanded definition antonym
  • ‘There had to be a hidden secret, underhanded or malign.’
  • ‘I've had four years of his sneaky, underhanded, dirty ways.’
  • ‘I use underhanded methods in order to accomplish good things.’
  • ‘There was always a hint that he was being underhanded, sneaky.’
  • ‘The film has three slackers riding their way through college on scams, cheats and underhanded stunts.’
  • ‘Alright, so it was a rather underhanded method of extracting the truth.’
  • ‘I remembered, with a sense of irony, the distaste I had had for such underhanded methods.’
  • ‘There was nothing underhanded or secretive about this at all.’
  • ‘Stacy's deceit is never very funny or amusing - it's just sneaky and underhanded.’
  • ‘He was merciless, cruel, underhanded, dirty, and brutal to his enemies.’
  • ‘Although their values are similar to my own, doesn't their method of getting laws passed seem a little underhanded?’
  • ‘Doug and I came up with a sneaky, underhanded and brilliant plan which kept us strong and under little pressure for the first three years.’
  • ‘He'd done a lot of things that could be considered underhanded, even duplicitous.’
  • ‘However, I feel that this should be the final act in our war of dirty, underhanded tricks.’
  • ‘This man was underhanded and sneaky, preferring to let others do the fighting for him.’
  • ‘Griffith and Viya both used such immoral, underhanded tactics to achieve what they wanted.’
  • ‘It always seems to me a kind of spiteful and devious and underhanded sort of job.’
  • ‘Surely, the activists will not stop until they have tried every means, no matter how underhanded, to get their way all across the country.’
  • ‘He told us that despite the delay and some confusion, there was nothing improper or underhanded about how events unfolded.’
  • ‘They have been underhanded and they have used cheap media ploys.’

Pronunciation

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