Chouse vs Hoodwink - What's the difference?
chouse | hoodwink | Related terms |
To cheat, to trick.
* '', 1853, J. Forster (editor), ''The Works of Walter Savage Landor , Volume 1,
*
(US, regional) To handle, to take care of.
* 1980 , John R. Erickson, Panhandle Cowboy ,
One who is easily cheated; a gullible person.
A trick; a sham.
A swindler.
(archaic) To cover the eyes with a hood; to blindfold.
* , Folio Society, 2006, vol.1 p.81:
To deceive or trick.
As verbs the difference between chouse and hoodwink
is that chouse is to cheat, to trick while hoodwink is to cover the eyes with a hood; to blindfold.As a noun chouse
is one who is easily cheated; a gullible person.chouse
English
Verb
page 29,
- I cannot think otherwise than that the undertaker of the aforecited poesy hath choused your Highness; for I have seen painted, I know not where, the identically same Dian, with full as many nymphs, as he calls them, and more dogs.
page 79,
- This gave the roundup the appearance of a cavalry charge, and a stranger observing the procedure for the first time might have thought we were a bunch of green, possibly drunken cowboys making sport out of chousing' cattle. But we weren't ' chousing them, we were just trying to keep them in sight, and for a very good reason.
Synonyms
* (cheat) cheat, trickNoun
(en noun)- (Hudibras)
- (Johnson)
- (Ben Jonson)
References
Anagrams
*hoodwink
English
(wikipedia hoodwink)Verb
(en verb)- Some there are, that through feare anticipate the hangmans hand; as he did, whose friends having obtained his pardon, and putting away the cloth wherewith he was hood-winkt , that he might heare it read, was found starke dead upon the scaffold, wounded only by the stroke of imagination.
- I feel like the salesman hoodwinked me into buying right away.