English to Malay Dictionary deceive

deceive

memperdaya
definition
verb
I didn't intend to deceive people into thinking it was French champagne
(of a person) cause (someone) to believe something that is not true, typically in order to gain some personal advantage.
translation of 'deceive'
verb
memperdayakan
example
It really is important for people to be aware there are people out there willing to 'deceive' our elderly residents.
His looks may 'deceive' you into thinking he is still in his teens but 32-year-old Angus is a father of two boys Niquan two and Shaquan four.
He helped disguise loans as sales in order to boost the company's revenue - on paper - and thereby 'deceive' the public as well as government regulators.
For a moment, she had believed him… but she couldn't let him 'deceive' her again, it couldn't be true - he didn't love her.
I didn't intend to 'deceive' people into thinking it was French champagne
Microsoft argues that our memories often 'deceive' us: experiences get exaggerated, we muddle the timing of events and simply forget stuff.
The campaign, launched by the Office of Fair Trading, aims to draw attention to unscrupulous holiday clubs that deliberately 'deceive' consumers and pressurise them into membership.
In other walks of life when people set out deliberately to 'deceive' people, it gets called ‘deceit’.
Your gut instincts won't 'deceive' you - but the conclusions you draw from them, and decisions you make, may.
everything about him was intended to 'deceive'
No, your eyes do not 'deceive' you - 85 games crammed on to one disc, a task made easier because most take up only a few megabytes each, but it is still a bargain.
‘It's difficult to catch someone who is deliberately trying to 'deceive' you,’ Mr. Rosenstiel said.
He had tried to 'deceive' employers and police by changing his middle name from Phillip to Clayton.
Indeed it is also clear that your representatives were deliberately lying when making these statements, and thus deliberately intending to 'deceive' members of the public.
That is, (if the obtuse language doesn't 'deceive' me), within the law.
But a word of caution - the season continues well into November so don't let the good start 'deceive' you.
enabling the rulers to 'deceive' themselves about the nature of their own rule
Don't let its looks 'deceive' you: aloe vera is, in fact, a member of the lily family.
I didn't intend to 'deceive' people into thinking it was French champagne
What's strange is that, for some odd reason, my memory is 'deceiving' me.
Many have justifiable ethical concerns about deliberately 'deceiving' patients regarding the nature of their treatment.
Take it for what it is baby and stop 'deceiving yourself' .
After watching the pilot DVD in stunned silence, I had to check a few episodes on disk 2 of the four DVD set, just to make sure that my eyes hadn't 'deceived' me.
He 'deceived' his wife with at least two other women, one of whom became pregnant
Mrs Atkinson is also sure that her eyes were not 'deceiving' her.
He said: ‘Elderly householders are vulnerable to plausible 'deceivers' who create anxiety by claiming to observe defects in their houses and then offer to repair them.’
To those who lionise him, he is a clear-eyed defender of faith and nationhood, a speaker of truth in a time of 'deceivers' .
You stole from and 'deceived' patients and colleagues and deliberately covered up your actions.
No, my friends, your eyes are not 'deceiving' you.
Is 'deceiving' a patient about her true medical condition, in the interest of promoting an optimistic attitude, likely to increase her chances of recovery?
Credits: Google Translate
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