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All cheesing synonyms

cheese
C c

verb cheesing

  • misinterpret β€” Interpret (something or someone) wrongly.
  • confuse β€” If you confuse two things, you get them mixed up, so that you think one of them is the other one.
  • overstate β€” to state too strongly; exaggerate: to overstate one's position in a controversy.
  • skew β€” to turn aside or swerve; take an oblique course.
  • misstate β€” to state wrongly or misleadingly; make a wrong statement about.
  • distort β€” to twist awry or out of shape; make crooked or deformed: Arthritis had distorted his fingers.
  • disguise β€” to change the appearance or guise of so as to conceal identity or mislead, as by means of deceptive garb: The king was disguised as a peasant.
  • falsify β€” to make false or incorrect, especially so as to deceive: to falsify income-tax reports.
  • cover up β€” If you cover something or someone up, you put something over them in order to protect or hide them.
  • pervert β€” to affect with perversion.
  • color β€” the sensation resulting from stimulation of the retina of the eye by light waves of certain lengths
  • cloak β€” A cloak is a long, loose, sleeveless piece of clothing which people used to wear over their other clothes when they went out.
  • twist β€” to combine, as two or more strands or threads, by winding together; intertwine.
  • dress β€” an outer garment for women and girls, consisting of bodice and skirt in one piece.
  • prevaricate β€” to speak falsely or misleadingly; deliberately misstate or create an incorrect impression; lie.
  • angle β€” An angle is the difference in direction between two lines or surfaces. Angles are measured in degrees.
  • stretch β€” to draw out or extend (oneself, a body, limbs, wings, etc.) to the full length or extent (often followed by out): to stretch oneself out on the ground.
  • snow β€” Sir Charles Percy (C. P. Snow) 1905–80, English novelist and scientist.
  • pirate β€” software pirate
  • garble β€” to confuse unintentionally or ignorantly; jumble: to garble instructions.
  • palter β€” to talk or act insincerely or deceitfully; lie or use trickery.
  • slant β€” to veer or angle away from a given level or line, especially from a horizontal; slope.
  • warp β€” OS/2
  • promote β€” to help or encourage to exist or flourish; further: to promote world peace.
  • adulterate β€” If something such as food or drink is adulterated, someone has made its quality worse by adding water or cheaper products to it.
  • mask β€” a form of aristocratic entertainment in England in the 16th and 17th centuries, originally consisting of pantomime and dancing but later including dialogue and song, presented in elaborate productions given by amateur and professional actors.
  • belie β€” If one thing belies another, it hides the true situation and so creates a false idea or image of someone or something.
  • puff β€” a short, quick blast, as of wind or breath.
  • blarney β€” Blarney is things someone says that are flattering and amusing but probably untrue, and which you think they are only saying in order to please you or to persuade you to do something.
  • beard β€” A man's beard is the hair that grows on his chin and cheeks.
  • mangle β€” to smooth or press with a mangle.
  • con β€” Con is the written abbreviation for constable, when it is part of a policeman's title.
  • cheese β€” Cheese is a solid food made from milk. It is usually white or yellow.
  • overdraw β€” to draw upon (an account, allowance, etc.) in excess of the balance standing to one's credit or at one's disposal: It was the first time he had ever overdrawn his account.
  • build up β€” If you build up something or if it builds up, it gradually becomes bigger, for example because more is added to it.
  • blow smoke β€” (Idiomatic) To speak with a lack of credibility, sense, purpose, or truth; to speak nonsense.
  • miscolor β€” to give a wrong color to.
  • misreport β€” to report incorrectly or falsely.
  • trump up β€” Cards. any playing card of a suit that for the time outranks the other suits, such a card being able to take any card of another suit. Often, trumps. (used with a singular verb) the suit itself.
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