Treta in english

Ruse

pronunciation: none part of speech: none
In gestures

treta = gimmick ; ruse ; stalking horse ; trick ; gaff ; wheeze ; act of deception ; wile ; guile. 

Example: Many outreach efforts foundered because they were primarily public relations gimmicks aimed at changing the public rather than the library.Example: The library did not burn and the purchase of Thomas Jefferson's library as a replacement was a ruse to help pay the former President's debts.Example: Legalism and pragmatism were the intellectual stalking horses that contributed most to the victory of economic interest over human concerns in this case.Example: But if variable-length keys are not supported by a data base, various tricks are often necessary to provide access to the library data which has inherently variable-length keys.Example: There are magicians that choose not to work with gaffs of any type because they want to take magic in new directions.Example: Last year's profits were more than halved, so the company has come up with a clever wheeze.Example: An act of deception intended for personal gain or to cause a loss to another party is called fraud.Example: Cleopatra would use her wiles and wits to become the sole ruler of Egypt and the lover of the two most powerful men of Rome: Caesar and Marc Antony.Example: They loved his genuineness and utter lack of guile.

more:

» con tretasby cunning .

Example: He is a systematic 'sweater' who sucks wealth from toiling crowds by cunning and by stealth.

» tretascrafty ways .

Example: The article 'The crafty ways of a school librarian' describes how to work with young children by reinforcing reading sessions with craft-based activities.

Treta synonyms

artifice in spanish: artificio, pronunciation: ɑrtəfɪs part of speech: noun
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