Feigned vs Feinted - What's the difference?
feigned | feinted |
Being a pretense, a counterfeit, or something false or fraudulent.
(feign)
(feint)
To make a feint, or mock attack.
(to make a counterfeit move to confuse an opponent)
* Chinese:
*: Mandarin:
* Finnish: (t)
(trans-mid)
* Maori: (t), (t), (t),
* Russian:
* Swedish:
(trans-bottom)
(obsolete) Feigned; counterfeit.
* John Locke
(fencing, boxing, war) (of an attack) directed toward a different part from the intended strike
A movement made to confuse the opponent, a dummy
That which is feigned; an assumed or false appearance; a pretense; a stratagem; a fetch.
* Spectator
(fencing, boxing, war) An offensive movement resembling an attack in all but its continuance
The narrowest rule used in the production of lined writing paper (C19: Variant of FAINT)
As verbs the difference between feigned and feinted
is that feigned is (feign) while feinted is (feint).As an adjective feigned
is being a pretense, a counterfeit, or something false or fraudulent.feigned
English
Adjective
(-)- 1841' ''"I have passed my word," said Jowl with '''feigned reluctance, "and I'll keep it. When does this match come off? I wish it was over. -- To-night?"'' — Charles Dickens, ''The Old Curiosity Shop ,
Chapter 9.
Synonyms
* See alsoVerb
(head)Anagrams
* feedingfeinted
English
Verb
(head)feint
English
Verb
(en verb)Adjective
(-)- Dressed up into any feint appearance of it.
Noun
(en noun)- Courtley's letter is but a feint to get off.