A person who swindles you by means of deception or fraud.
Sinônimos
Examples for "swindler"
Examples for "swindler"
1I am not a swindler, and I guard myself; that is all.
2He has the stuff in him for a very clever, fashionable swindler.
3The man was an international swindler and was wanted by the police.
4A plan to confuse and outwit the swindler occurred to our hero.
5The swindler was not there, nor was he on the adjoining roof.
1You should be locked up, he told a Covid-19 scammer earlier this week.
2The scammer, who said her name was Anne, took down the hospital's address.
3And, suffice to say, he'd never hear from the scammer again.
4Or maybe Teague was the scammer and Strike her gullible victim.
5She then vows to find the scammer, played by Wilson, and exact revenge.
1The chiseller took his favourite seat in the corner furthest from the window.
2The chiseller therefore feigned indifference, and was silent for some minutes.
3He'd been there as a chiseller, a spotty-faced youth and a consenting adult.
4A long pause followed the animated discourse of the chiseller.
5Secondly, because Carnesecchi is a better match for my daughter than a beggarly chiseller.
1Low Key, who was a grifter from Minnesota, smiled his scarred smile.
2He is instead a local grifter, a high-rolling and high losing gambler.
3There's bound to be a treacherous little grifter somewhere in our midst.
4But honestly I'm not a grifter and I can't be arsed.
5I used to be a bit of a grifter myself.'
1And you know he's a chiseler because he's chiseling you.
2He no doubt meant it: he was just a petty chiseler, not a big one.
3You know Bernie's chiseling you because he's a chiseler.
4Kate might have been a chiseler, but she wasn't.
5No matter what happens, I'm not going to travel with that chiseler anymore after tomorrow morning.
1You are a defrauder and a cheat; you are nothing but a landsman, a plough-tail sugar-planter!
2And you will go to law for it, and you will denounce the man as a defrauder.
3And the old defrauder, who was the chief of a great band, without rancor, with effusion, presses Arrochkoa's two hands.
4A man that is a thief, a cheater, a defrauder, will yet be faithful to him that will commit a charge to him to keep.
5The Revenue Commissioners is to introduce a new computer system that will alert it to possible tax defrauders.
1There is never a nickel that gets by that old gouger.
2A gouger is one who stabs with his thumb.
3The gouger is actor Colin Farrell, last seen by most people persecuting Tom Cruise in Steven Spielberg's Minority Report.
4Labor laws being what they are in Europe these days, it is apparently no longer cost-effective to employ an eye-gouger.
5The three Englishmen, Gouger, Laird, and Rogers, were called and examined.
6Pharmaceutical companies are generally seen as well to use the phrase price gougers basically.
7Nor had the Gouger borne him any ill-will for it.
8He only wears shades in winter - "the gougers steal them from me in the summer".
9Price-gougers can be fined $1,000 per incident and up to $25,000 per day.
10City of merchants -sorry, I mean thieves, gougers, frauds and those who fatten themselves on the misery of others.
11Amazon called the price-gougers "bad actors." "There is no place for price gouging on Amazon," a spokesman said in a statement.
12Milfort gives a very amusing account of the "Anglo-Américains d'une espèce particulière," whom he calls "crakeurs ou gaugeurs," (crackers or gougers).
13Mr. Gouger, a young merchant residing at Ava, was then with us, and had much more reason to fear than the rest of us.