「In a complicit manner.」のEnglishの単語
上に「In a complicit manner.」に関連する単語が表示されています。詳しく知りたい単語にマウスを合わせると定義が表示されます。検索アイコンをクリックするとより適切な単語を見つけられます。ChatGPTのおかげで、全体的な結果が大幅に改善されました。
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noun
- An accomplice; abettor; associate.
- Any band or body of warriors.
- (taxonomy) A natural group of orders of organisms, less comprehensive than a class.
- A set of individuals in a program, especially when compared to previous sets of individuals within the same program.
- (statistics) A demographic grouping of people, especially those in a defined age group, or having a common characteristic.
- A group of people supporting the same thing or person.
- A colleague.
- (historical, Ancient Rome, military) Any division of a Roman legion, normally of about 500 or 600 men (equalling about six centuries).
- a band of warriors (originally a unit of a Roman Legion)
- a group of people having approximately the same age
- a company of companions or supporters
verb
noun
- An agreement or arrangement between multiple parties to do something harmful, immoral or subversive; an instance of collusion.
- (law) An agreement between two or more persons to break the law at some time in the future.
- (linguistics) A situation in which different phonological or grammatical rules lead to similar or related outcomes.
- (rare, collective) A group of ravens.
- (loosely) An agreement to work together to bring something about; an act or instance of conspiring.
- (loosely) A secret agreement to do something.
- (rare, collective) A group of lemurs.
- (by ellipsis, proscribed) A conspiracy theory; a hypothesis alleging conspiracy.
- a group of conspirators banded together to achieve some harmful or illegal purpose
- a plot to carry out some harmful or illegal act (especially a political plot)
- a secret agreement between two or more people to perform an unlawful act
verb
noun
noun
- An accomplice in a plot.
- (psychology) An actor who participates in a psychological experiment pretending to be a subject but in actuality working for the researcher.
- A member of a confederacy.
- a person who joins with another in carrying out some plan (especially an unethical or illegal plan)
- someone who assists in a plot
adj
verb
adj
noun
adj
- aiding and abetting in a crime
- furnishing added support
- Having a secondary, supplementary or subordinate function by accompanying as a subordinate; aiding in a secondary way; being additional; contributing or being contributory.
- (medicine, biology) Supernumerary and generally nonfunctional.
- Present in a minor amount, and not essential.
- (law) Assisting a crime without actually participating in committing the crime itself; being connected as an incident or subordinate to a principal.
noun
- clothing that is worn or carried, but not part of your main clothing
- a supplementary component that improves capability
- someone who helps another person commit a crime
- (art) Something in a work of art without being indispensably necessary, for example solely ornamental parts.
- Something that belongs to part of another main thing; something additional and subordinate, an attachment.
- (fashion) An article that completes one's basic outfit, such as a scarf or gloves.
- (law) A person who is not present at a crime, but contributes to it as an assistant or instigator.
noun
- agreeing with or consenting to (often unwillingly)
- the act of attaining or gaining access to a new office or right or position (especially the throne)
- something added to what you already have
- (civil law) the right to all of that which your property produces whether by growth or improvement
- a process of increasing by addition (as to a collection or group)
- the right to enter
- (medicine) The invasion, approach, or commencement of a disease; a fit or paroxysm.
- Access; admittance.
- The act of coming to or reaching a throne, an office, or dignity.
- A group of plants of the same species collected at a single location, often held in genebanks.
- A coming to; the act of acceding and becoming joined.
- (law) The act by which one power becomes party to engagements already in force between other powers.
- (law) A mode of acquiring property, by which the owner of a corporeal substance which receives an addition by growth, or by labor, has a right to the part or thing added, or the improvement (provided the thing is not changed into a different species).
- Such augmentation that adds to the collections of a museum or archive; a thing thus added.
- (Scotland) Complicity, concurrence or assent in some action.
- Increase by something added; that which is added; augmentation from without.
- Agreement.
verb
verb
- cooperate or pretend to cooperate
- perform an accompaniment to
- (idiomatic) To take part in a charade, deception, or practical joke.
- (idiomatic) To participate in a joke or trick while hiding one's knowledge of its true nature.
- (idiomatic) To play a musical instrument in synchrony with a playback of a recording.
- (idiomatic, US) To pretend to cooperate or go along with a plan.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see play, along.
- (idiomatic, US) To cooperate or go along with a plan.
- (idiomatic, UK) To manipulate (someone).
verb
- (intransitive) To secretly cooperate with other people in order to commit a crime or other wrongdoing; to collude, to conspire.
- (intransitive, botany, rare) Of parts of a plant: to be converging or in close contact; to be connivent.
- form intrigues (for) in an underhand manner
- encourage or assent to illegally or criminally
noun
verb
verb
- (intransitive, law) To collude, as where an informer colludes with the defendant, and makes a sham prosecution.
- (intransitive) To speak or act in a manner that is intentionally ambiguous or evasive; equivocate.
- (law, UK) To undertake something falsely and deceitfully, with the purpose of defeating or destroying it.
- be deliberately ambiguous or unclear in order to mislead or withhold information
noun
noun
verb
adj
- Willing to act dishonestly for personal gain; accepting bribes.
- Abounding in errors; not genuine or correct; in an invalid state.
- In a putrid state; spoiled; tainted; vitiated; unsound.
- In a depraved state; debased; perverted; morally degenerate; weak in morals.
- containing errors or alterations
- lacking in integrity
- touched by rot or decay
- not straight; dishonest or immoral or evasive
verb
- (transitive) To introduce errors; to place into an invalid state.
- (transitive) To make corrupt; to change from good to bad; to draw away from the right path; to deprave; to pervert.
- To waste, spoil, or consume; to make worthless.
- To debase or make impure by alterations or additions; to falsify.
- place under suspicion or cast doubt upon
- alter from the original
- corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality
- make illegal payments to in exchange for favors or influence
verb
noun
- a plot to carry out some harmful or illegal act (especially a political plot)
- a clique (often secret) that seeks power usually through intrigue
- A secret plot.
- (derogatory) A putative, secret organization of individuals gathered for a political purpose.
- An identifiable group within the tradition of Discordianism.
verb
- engage in plotting or enter into a conspiracy, swear together
- summon into action or bring into existence, often as if by magic
- ask for or request earnestly
- (transitive) To imagine or picture in the mind.
- (transitive) To summon (a devil, etc.) using supernatural power.
- (transitive) To evoke.
- (intransitive) To perform magic tricks.
noun
verb
- engage in plotting or enter into a conspiracy, swear together
- act in unison or agreement and in secret towards a deceitful or illegal purpose
- (intransitive) To secretly plot or make plans together, often with the intention to bring bad or illegal results; to collude, to connive, to plot.
- (transitive) To work together to bring about.
- (intransitive) To agree, to concur to one end.
noun
- a member of a conspiracy
- an instrument (usually driven by a computer) for drawing graphs or pictures
- a clerk who marks data on a chart
- a planner who draws up a personal scheme of action
- (computing) An output device that draws graphs and other pictorial images on paper, sometimes using attached pens.
- (slang) An author who usually relies on a plan or outline to organize their story.
- (navigation) An instrument used to mark or find the position of a vessel on a chart.
- A person who plots.
verb
noun
- An accomplice; abettor; associate.
- Any band or body of warriors.
- (taxonomy) A natural group of orders of organisms, less comprehensive than a class.
- A set of individuals in a program, especially when compared to previous sets of individuals within the same program.
- (statistics) A demographic grouping of people, especially those in a defined age group, or having a common characteristic.
- A group of people supporting the same thing or person.
- A colleague.
- (historical, Ancient Rome, military) Any division of a Roman legion, normally of about 500 or 600 men (equalling about six centuries).
- a band of warriors (originally a unit of a Roman Legion)
- a group of people having approximately the same age
- a company of companions or supporters
verb
noun
- An agreement or arrangement between multiple parties to do something harmful, immoral or subversive; an instance of collusion.
- (law) An agreement between two or more persons to break the law at some time in the future.
- (linguistics) A situation in which different phonological or grammatical rules lead to similar or related outcomes.
- (rare, collective) A group of ravens.
- (loosely) An agreement to work together to bring something about; an act or instance of conspiring.
- (loosely) A secret agreement to do something.
- (rare, collective) A group of lemurs.
- (by ellipsis, proscribed) A conspiracy theory; a hypothesis alleging conspiracy.
- a group of conspirators banded together to achieve some harmful or illegal purpose
- a plot to carry out some harmful or illegal act (especially a political plot)
- a secret agreement between two or more people to perform an unlawful act
verb
noun
noun
- An accomplice in a plot.
- (psychology) An actor who participates in a psychological experiment pretending to be a subject but in actuality working for the researcher.
- A member of a confederacy.
- a person who joins with another in carrying out some plan (especially an unethical or illegal plan)
- someone who assists in a plot
adj
verb
noun
- agreeing with or consenting to (often unwillingly)
- the act of attaining or gaining access to a new office or right or position (especially the throne)
- something added to what you already have
- (civil law) the right to all of that which your property produces whether by growth or improvement
- a process of increasing by addition (as to a collection or group)
- the right to enter
- (medicine) The invasion, approach, or commencement of a disease; a fit or paroxysm.
- Access; admittance.
- The act of coming to or reaching a throne, an office, or dignity.
- A group of plants of the same species collected at a single location, often held in genebanks.
- A coming to; the act of acceding and becoming joined.
- (law) The act by which one power becomes party to engagements already in force between other powers.
- (law) A mode of acquiring property, by which the owner of a corporeal substance which receives an addition by growth, or by labor, has a right to the part or thing added, or the improvement (provided the thing is not changed into a different species).
- Such augmentation that adds to the collections of a museum or archive; a thing thus added.
- (Scotland) Complicity, concurrence or assent in some action.
- Increase by something added; that which is added; augmentation from without.
- Agreement.
verb
noun
verb
noun
noun
verb
noun
- a member of a conspiracy
- an instrument (usually driven by a computer) for drawing graphs or pictures
- a clerk who marks data on a chart
- a planner who draws up a personal scheme of action
- (computing) An output device that draws graphs and other pictorial images on paper, sometimes using attached pens.
- (slang) An author who usually relies on a plan or outline to organize their story.
- (navigation) An instrument used to mark or find the position of a vessel on a chart.
- A person who plots.
verb
verb
- cooperate or pretend to cooperate
- perform an accompaniment to
- (idiomatic) To take part in a charade, deception, or practical joke.
- (idiomatic) To participate in a joke or trick while hiding one's knowledge of its true nature.
- (idiomatic) To play a musical instrument in synchrony with a playback of a recording.
- (idiomatic, US) To pretend to cooperate or go along with a plan.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see play, along.
- (idiomatic, US) To cooperate or go along with a plan.
- (idiomatic, UK) To manipulate (someone).
verb
- (intransitive) To secretly cooperate with other people in order to commit a crime or other wrongdoing; to collude, to conspire.
- (intransitive, botany, rare) Of parts of a plant: to be converging or in close contact; to be connivent.
- form intrigues (for) in an underhand manner
- encourage or assent to illegally or criminally
verb
- (intransitive, law) To collude, as where an informer colludes with the defendant, and makes a sham prosecution.
- (intransitive) To speak or act in a manner that is intentionally ambiguous or evasive; equivocate.
- (law, UK) To undertake something falsely and deceitfully, with the purpose of defeating or destroying it.
- be deliberately ambiguous or unclear in order to mislead or withhold information
verb
noun
- a plot to carry out some harmful or illegal act (especially a political plot)
- a clique (often secret) that seeks power usually through intrigue
- A secret plot.
- (derogatory) A putative, secret organization of individuals gathered for a political purpose.
- An identifiable group within the tradition of Discordianism.
verb
- engage in plotting or enter into a conspiracy, swear together
- summon into action or bring into existence, often as if by magic
- ask for or request earnestly
- (transitive) To imagine or picture in the mind.
- (transitive) To summon (a devil, etc.) using supernatural power.
- (transitive) To evoke.
- (intransitive) To perform magic tricks.
noun
verb
- engage in plotting or enter into a conspiracy, swear together
- act in unison or agreement and in secret towards a deceitful or illegal purpose
- (intransitive) To secretly plot or make plans together, often with the intention to bring bad or illegal results; to collude, to connive, to plot.
- (transitive) To work together to bring about.
- (intransitive) To agree, to concur to one end.
adj
noun
adj
- aiding and abetting in a crime
- furnishing added support
- Having a secondary, supplementary or subordinate function by accompanying as a subordinate; aiding in a secondary way; being additional; contributing or being contributory.
- (medicine, biology) Supernumerary and generally nonfunctional.
- Present in a minor amount, and not essential.
- (law) Assisting a crime without actually participating in committing the crime itself; being connected as an incident or subordinate to a principal.
noun
- clothing that is worn or carried, but not part of your main clothing
- a supplementary component that improves capability
- someone who helps another person commit a crime
- (art) Something in a work of art without being indispensably necessary, for example solely ornamental parts.
- Something that belongs to part of another main thing; something additional and subordinate, an attachment.
- (fashion) An article that completes one's basic outfit, such as a scarf or gloves.
- (law) A person who is not present at a crime, but contributes to it as an assistant or instigator.
adj
- Willing to act dishonestly for personal gain; accepting bribes.
- Abounding in errors; not genuine or correct; in an invalid state.
- In a putrid state; spoiled; tainted; vitiated; unsound.
- In a depraved state; debased; perverted; morally degenerate; weak in morals.
- containing errors or alterations
- lacking in integrity
- touched by rot or decay
- not straight; dishonest or immoral or evasive
verb
- (transitive) To introduce errors; to place into an invalid state.
- (transitive) To make corrupt; to change from good to bad; to draw away from the right path; to deprave; to pervert.
- To waste, spoil, or consume; to make worthless.
- To debase or make impure by alterations or additions; to falsify.
- place under suspicion or cast doubt upon
- alter from the original
- corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality
- make illegal payments to in exchange for favors or influence