˜yÐÄvlog

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View synonyms for

conniving

[ kuh-nahy-ving ]

adjective

  1. cooperating secretly, especially with harmful or evil intent; conspiring:

    a conniving liar and thief.



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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of conniving1

First recorded in 1625–50; connive ( def ) + -ing 2( def )
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

He’s conniving, manipulative and has somehow incredibly managed to survive flying on the seat of some very thin pants since his father sent him out to collect rent as a budding slumlord.

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Kaitlyn Dever — doing an astonishingly convincing Australian accent — stars as Belle, playing the wannabe guru as a lonely but conniving young woman who uses lies to evoke sympathy.

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Quarterback Brady Smigiel, usually the calm, cool, helpful teenager, was conniving to do something sinister.

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They pick up on any and all evidence about human evil and conniving and explain away or ignore evidence of positive human qualities.

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Rasmussen’s sisters and widower gave emotional testimony during Monday’s hearing about their pain and described Lazarus as a conniving criminal who used her police training to cover up the killing.

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