artifice

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See also: artífice

English

Etymology

From Middle French artifice, from Latin artificium.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈɑː(ɹ)tɪfɪs/
  • Audio (US):(file)

Noun

artifice (countable and uncountable, plural artifices)

  1. A crafty but underhanded deception.
    • 2021 November 21, Charles Hugh Smith, When Everything Is Artifice and PR, Collapse Beckons[1]:
      The notion that consequence can be as easily managed as PR is the ultimate artifice and the ultimate delusion.
  2. A trick played out as an ingenious, but artful, ruse.
    • 2021 September 22, Caroline Siede, “Dear Evan Hansen is a misfire on just about every level”, in AV Club[2]:
      The heightened worlds of darkly comedic satire and soapy high-school romance make it easy enough to roll with unrealistic casting choices—and that goes for stage musicals, too, where some level of artifice is built into the format.
  3. A strategic maneuver that uses some clever means to avoid detection or capture.
  4. A tactical move to gain advantage.
  5. (archaic) Something made with technical skill; a contrivance.

Translations

Verb

artifice (third-person singular simple present artifices, present participle artificing, simple past and past participle artificed)

  1. To construct by means of skill or specialised art

Further reading

Anagrams


French

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin artificium.

Pronunciation

Noun

artifice m (plural artifices)

  1. artifice, trick, ploy
  2. (literary) device

Derived terms

Further reading


Latin

Noun

(deprecated template usage) artifice

  1. ablative singular of artifex