Cheat at là gì

Tiếng Anh[sửa]

Cách phát âm[sửa]

  • IPA: /ˈtʃit/

 Hoa Kỳ [trợ giúp · chi tiết] [ˈtʃit]

Danh từ[sửa]

cheat /ˈtʃit/

  1. Trò lừa đảo, trò lừa bịp; trò gian lận, ngón gian.
  2. người lừa đảo, kẻ gian lận; tên cờ bạc bịp, tên cờ bạc gian lận.

Thành ngữ[sửa]

  • topping cheat: [Từ lóng] Cái giá treo cổ.

Ngoại động từ[sửa]

cheat ngoại động từ /ˈtʃit/

  1. Lừa, lừa đảo [ai]. to cheat someone [out] of something — lừa ai để lấy vật gì
  2. Tiêu, làm tiêu tan [thì giờ, mệt nhọc, bằng cách đi chơi... ].

Chia động từ[sửa]

Nội động từ[sửa]

cheat nội động từ /ˈtʃit/

  1. Gian lận; đánh bạc bịp.
  2. [từ Mỹ, nghĩa Mỹ] , [từ lóng] có ngoại tình; [[thường] + on] không chung thuỷ.

Chia động từ[sửa]

Tham khảo[sửa]

  • "cheat". Hồ Ngọc Đức, Dự án Từ điển tiếng Việt miễn phí [chi tiết]

Trang trước

Trang sau  

Cụm động từ Cheat on có 2 nghĩa:

Nghĩa từ Cheat on

Ý nghĩa của Cheat on là:

  • Ngoại tình

Ví dụ minh họa cụm động từ Cheat on:

 
- She CHEATED ON me with my friend.
Cô ta đã ngoại tình với bạn tôi.

Nghĩa từ Cheat on

Ý nghĩa của Cheat on là:

  • Lừa dối, phản bội

Ví dụ minh họa cụm động từ Cheat on:

 
- She thought he had always been faithful to her, but he had been CHEATING
ON her ever since their wedding day [with one of the bridesmaids].
Cô ấy đã nghĩ rằng anh ta luôn luôn chung thủy với cô ấy, nhưng anh ta đã
phản bội cô ngay từ ngày cưới của họ [với một phù dâu].

Một số cụm động từ khác

Ngoài cụm động từ Cheat on trên, động từ Cheat còn có một số cụm động từ sau:

  • Cụm động từ Cheat on

  • Cụm động từ Cheat out of

Trang trước

Trang sau  

c-cum-dong-tu-trong-tieng-anh.jsp

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  • #1

Hi,
Could you tell me if I used the correct preposition in the sentence:
"He cheated at the exam".

Thank you
Virr

  • elroy

    Moderator: EHL, Arabic, Hebrew, German[-Spanish]

    • #2

    No. It should be "on" [in American English, at least].

    • #3

    At least one UK person with you on that one....

    • #4

    "cheat in exams".

    A quotation for the Student Handbook of the Southern Cross University:
    A student shall not cheat nor attempt to cheat in an examination.
    //www.scu.edu.au/docs/handbook/rules/aw_rule3.html

    However, just to make things complicated, you cheat at cards, and you cheat on your spouse.

    • #6

    No. It should be "on" [in American English, at least].

    A quick look on the internet yielded many US examples of "cheat in"

    elroy

    Moderator: EHL, Arabic, Hebrew, German[-Spanish]

    • #7

    A quick look on the internet yielded many US examples of "cheat in"

    "Cheat on" is much more common, then. Although I can't say "in" is wrong, I've personally always heard and used "on."

    • #8

    I cheat at cards.
    I cheat on my wife [please don't tell her I said that].
    I cheat in exams.
    But to be honest, I'm honest, except when I'm lying, as above.

    • #9

    it's very usual to say that you cheat on your partner [it's just an example] and to say that you cheat in an exam makes sense. What about cheating "at" cards? are there other "at" examples you might give us?

    Thanks in advance

    • #10

    No. It should be "on" [in American English, at least].

    Yes, it's "on" I have heard, as well as on someone.

    To cheat on finals/midterms/road test/your wife...etc.

    • #11

    So both are correct? I mean to cheat in/on exams?

    • #12

    It seems that AmE uses "on" more, while BrE uses "in" more, might be a useful generalization.

    • #13

    This discussion has been added to an earlier thread on the same topic. Cagey, moderator.

    What is the right sentence :
    1- Cheating on the exam .
    2- Cheating in the exam .
    Thanks in advance

    Last edited by a moderator: May 12, 2016

    elroy

    Moderator: EHL, Arabic, Hebrew, German[-Spanish]

    • #15

    In British English it is "cheat in the exam".

    • #16

    Yeah, both sound fine to me.

    • #17

    "cheat in " behave in a dishonest way in order to win or to get an advantage, especially in a competition, game, or examination
    for example:He had cheated in the test by using a calculator.
    "cheat on somebody"
    phrasal verb
    to be unfaithful to your husband, wife, or sexual partner by secretly having sex with someone else:
    for example :The magazine claims that almost half of Britain's women cheat on their partners.

    • #18

    They're both fine assuming the exam is a written one.

    In the phrase "cheat on the exam", "the exam" is likely a reference to the actual exam paper/booklet.

    In the phrase "cheat in the exam", "the exam" is a reference to the examination process.

    elroy

    Moderator: EHL, Arabic, Hebrew, German[-Spanish]

    • #19

    In the phrase "cheat in the exam", "the exam" is a reference to the examination process.

    What would be an example of this?

    • #20

    Did you see how he was writing in the exam?

    ie during.

    • #21

    What I mean is that we use the word "exam" to mean both the physical piece of paper that a student works on and the whole examination event or process. Consider the different means of "exam" in these examples.

    I've got a huge pile of exams to mark!
    Can you hand me that exam?
    Look at what this student drew on the back page of his exam!
    vs.
    How did you do in last week's exam?
    Did you pass or fail the exam?
    The results of the exam will be posted soon.

    In the first three examples, "exam" clearly refers to the physical paper. In the latter three, it refers to the event or process of examination.

    I think both "cheat on the exam" and "cheat in the exam" are perfectly idiomatic English. My original idea was that the preposition "on" gives "exam" a distinctly physical meaning [the student has cheated on the paper], whereas we're more likely to use "in" with an event. However, thinking more about it now, I realise that there are many times when we use "on" to refer to a point in time [e.g. "on Tuesday" or "on the holidays"], so I'm not sure my logic stands up to scrutiny. But speaking purely from intuition, if someone says to me that they did something "on the exam" I have no doubt that they mean specifically on the exam paper, as opposed to in the context of the exam event. [I wouldn't use "on" if I was referring to something that happened in an oral exam, for example.]

    • #22

    No. It should be "on" [in American English, at least].

    And how about tests? In or on? This dictionary examples uses "in".

    • #23

    I agree with those BE speakers who would use "cheat in the exam/test". It really means 'during'.

    • #24

    My students cheated in their exams when I wanted to emphasize that they cheated during the exam:
    He cheated in the exam -- right there in front of me he looked over at the paper of the student next to him and copied her answer.

    They cheated on their exams when I didn't want to emphasize when the cheating occurred.
    He cheated on his exams, but at least he wrote up his research project by himself without copying someone else's report.

    elroy

    Moderator: EHL, Arabic, Hebrew, German[-Spanish]

    • #25

    I would always say “on”: “during” is understood.
    But if I did mean “during,” I would say “during,” not “in.”
    “He cheated during the exam” sounds odd to me, because it sounds like during the exam he cheated on something else [not the exam] — an implausible scenario.
    “He bit his nails during the exam.”

    • #26

    I agree with those BE speakers who would use "cheat in the exam/test". It really means 'during'.

    So do I. One person in a relationship might cheat on the other by having an affair, but we cheat in exams/tests. Or at least some of us do.

    We might also cheat at a board or card game.

    • #27

    The WR dictionary must have an American English orientation. It shows "cheat on" for exams and spouses.

    • #28

    The WR dictionary must have an American English orientation.

    So does google translator. I just used it to translate this example from Polish.

    Last edited: Jul 15, 2021

    • #29

    Oh, don't take Google Translator as any sort of authority.

    If I translate 'Tomek cheated on the exam' into Polish, and then translate the Polish back into English, I get "Tom was cheating in the exam."

    And when I tried "Tomek cheated in the exam" and translated the Polish back again, I again got "Tom was cheating in the exam."

    • #30

    • [British English] Have you ever cheated in an exam?
    • [North American English] Have you ever cheated on an exam?

    Oxford Dictionary

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