Embaucador in english

Trickster

pronunciation: trɪkstɜr part of speech: noun
In gestures

embaucador1 = trickster ; swindler ; wheeler-dealer ; con artist ; con man ; humbug ; scamster ; fraudster ; fraud ; hoaxer ; hoaxster ; duper ; scam artist ; deceiver ; chiseller [chiseler, -USA] ; grifter ; defrauder ; hustler. 

Example: A chapter each is devoted to the comic hero, comedian, humorist, rogue, trickster, clown, fool, underdog, and simpleton.Example: The title of the book is 'Net crimes & misdemeanors: outmaneuvering the spammers, swindlers, and stalkers who are targeting you online'.Example: The term widget is taken from the 1963 movie, 'The Wheeler-Dealers'.Example: This unlikely threesome of a con artist, a hit man, and an idiot find themselves in deep water when their heist doesn't go off as planned.Example: His supporters call him a 'smoothie', while his critics generally portray him as a 'glib con man'.Example: Worldly people and even monks without spiritual discernment are nearly always attracted by humbugs, imposters, hypocrites and those who are in demonic delusion.Example: Small business operators can be easy prey for scamsters trying to winkle out money for unsolicited - and unneeded - 'services'.Example: The article 'Keeping fraudsters in check' describes computerized systems now being developed to help combat fraud.Example: You know what they say, if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it must be a duck, or in this case, a lying, stealing, cheating fraud.Example: In a subsequent call the hoaxer suggested that another bomb had been planted on the highway leading to the airport.Example: This recent tsunami is not the first disaster to be exploited by email hoaxsters.Example: Where the community was at one point solidly cooperative and helpful, it had been overrun by dupers and shysters.Example: Since rumor has it that they are broke and are primarily scam artists, maybe she is trying to earn an honest buck for a change.Example: Whatever the truth is in these cases, the world was reminded yet again that scoundrels, cheats and deceivers abound in the higher echelons of human society.Example: Reneging on agreements is not unknown in this business, especially by chisellers who have already tried to screw you.Example: It's amazing that people follow such grifters and con artist as if they are some sort of preacher of liberty.Example: The business community needs to be protected from such defrauders and crooks.Example: They are a bunch of hustlers, charlatans, and parasites -- they invent the most intricate theories and postulates in order to avoid picking up a shovel and working like ordinary people.

embaucador2 = duplicitous ; two-faced ; fast-talking ; smooth-talking ; smooth-tongued. 

Example: This remake of William Castle's action adventure adds a genuinely supernatural plot to the old story of the duplicitous wife scheming to kill her husband but being one-upped by his even more ingenious counterplots.Example: This course looks at this two-faced society with guided field trips to cemeteries and to the architecture of Edinburgh's underworld below the great banks and public buildings.Example: After inheriting her father's run-down circus, a woman and her fast-talking manager struggle to keep it afloat.Example: The Wizard, played by Joel Grey, is a smooth-talking dumbbell who admits he is 'a corn-fed hick' and 'one of your dime-a-dozen mediocrities'.Example: The father, Old Brightwell, curses his daughter, Jane, for preferring the love of the smooth-tongued villain, Grandley, to that of her own parents.

Embaucador synonyms

cheat in spanish: engañar, pronunciation: tʃit part of speech: verb, noun prankster in spanish: bromista, pronunciation: præŋkstɜr part of speech: noun cheater in spanish: tramposo, pronunciation: tʃitɜr part of speech: noun deceiver in spanish: engañador, pronunciation: dɪsivɜr part of speech: noun hoaxer in spanish: bromista, pronunciation: hoʊksɜr part of speech: noun practical joker in spanish: bromista, pronunciation: præktəkəldʒoʊkɜr part of speech: noun
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