Feint vs Crusade - What's the difference?
feint | crusade |
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)
Any of the military expeditions undertaken by the Christians of Europe in the 11th to 13th centuries to reconquer the Levant from the Muslims.
(figuratively) A grand concerted effort toward some purportedly worthy cause.
(archaic) A Portuguese coin; a crusado.
To make a grand concerted effort toward some purportedly worthy cause.
As a verb feint
is to make a feint, or mock attack.As an adjective feint
is (obsolete) feigned; counterfeit.As a noun feint
is a movement made to confuse the opponent, a dummy.As a proper noun crusade is
one of a series of ostensibly religious campaigns by christian forces from the 11th to the 13th century, mostly to capture the holy land from the muslims who occupied it.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.
crusade
English
Alternative forms
(medieval history) (Crusade)Noun
(en noun)- During the crusades , many Muslims and Christians and Jews were slaughtered.
- a crusade against drug abuse
Derived terms
* crusaderReferences
*AskOxford.com
See also
* holy war * jihad * Miles ChristiVerb
(crusad)- He crusaded against similar injustices for the rest of his life.
