feint
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Audio (Southern England): | (file) |
The noun is borrowed from French feinte (“dummy, feint”), from feindre (“to fake, feign”), from Old French feindre, faindre,[1] from Latin fingere, the present active infinitive of fingō (“to alter the truth to deceive, dissemble, feign, pretend; to fashion, form, shape”).
The verb is derived from the noun.[2]
feint (plural feints)
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feint (third-person singular simple present feints, present participle feinting, simple past and past participle feinted)
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Borrowed from French feint, the past participle of feindre (“to fake, feign”): see etymology 1.[3]
feint (not comparable)
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A variant of faint (“barely perceptible; not bright, loud, or sharp”).[4]
feint (not comparable)
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