Term: fraud





fraud (noun) /frɔːd/

  1. The crime of getting money or an advantage by deceiving people. LV: krāpšana, krāpniecība.
  2. A person or thing that is not what it is claimed to be. LV: krāpnieks, viltojums.

Example sentences:

  1. He was arrested for credit card fraud after using someone else’s details to buy a luxury watch.
  2. The investigation revealed a massive corporate fraud involving millions of euros.
  3. She felt like a fraud when they praised her for the project, as her colleague had done most of the work.

Common Types of Fraud

  • Identity Fraud: Using someone else’s personal information (ID, passport, SSN) to open bank accounts or take out loans.
  • Financial/Bank Fraud: Illegal acts to obtain money from financial institutions (e.g., check forging or skimming).
  • Click Fraud: In digital advertising, clicking on ads to drain a competitor’s budget or generate fake revenue.
  • Insurance Fraud: Making false claims to an insurance company to receive a payout.

The Legal Perspective

To be legally considered fraud, a situation usually requires four elements:

  1. A false statement (a lie or misrepresentation).
  2. Knowledge that the statement is false.
  3. Intent to deceive the victim.
  4. Damage (the victim suffered a loss, usually financial).

Common Phrases:

  • Commit fraud: To carry out the deceptive act.
  • Defraud someone: (Verb) To take something from someone by fraud.”The company defrauded its investors by faking its profit margins.”
  • Fraudulent (adjective): Intended to deceive.”They were caught making fraudulent claims for government subsidies.”
  • Anti-fraud measures: Systems or laws put in place to prevent or detect scams.

Synonyms:

  • Scam: (Informal) A clever or dishonest way to make money.
  • Deception: The act of hiding the truth.
  • Swindle: To get money from someone by being dishonest.
Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary
fraud (noun)
1.
a) - deceit trickery , specifically intentional perversion of truth in order to induce another to part with something of value or to surrender a legal right
b) an act of deceiving or misrepresenting - trick
2.
a) a person who is not what he or she pretends to be - impostor , also one who defrauds - cheat
b) one that is not what it seems or is represented to be deception, imposture
Merriam-Webster Online Thesaurus
fraud (noun)
1.
an instance of the use of dishonest methods to acquire something of value
SYNONYMS:
bunco ( bunko), con, fiddle, flimflam, gyp, hustle, scam, shell game, sting, swindle
RELATED WORDS:
cross, fix; Ponzi scheme, pyramid scheme; racket, rip-off; thimblerig, three-card monte; device, dodge, gimmick, jig, ploy, scheme, sleight, stratagem, trick, wile; gouging, overcharging, soaking; counterfeit, fake, forgery, hoax, humbug, phony ( phoney), sham
fraud (noun)
2.
one who makes false claims of identity or expertise
SYNONYMS:
charlatan, fake, faker, fakir, fraud, hoaxer, humbug, mountebank, phony ( phoney), pretender, quack, quacksalver, ringer, sham
RELATED WORDS:
copycat, imitator, impersonator, mimic; actor, bluffer, counterfeiter, deceiver, dissembler, duper, feigner, misleader, operator, trickster; poseur; cozener, defrauder, dodger, fraudster [], scammer, scamster, sharper, sharpie ( sharpy), skinner, swindler
NEAR ANTONYMS:
ace, adept, authority, crackerjack ( crackajack), expert, maestro, master, past master, professional, virtuoso, whiz, wizard
fraud (noun)
3.
the inclination or practice of misleading others through lies or trickery
SYNONYMS:
artifice, cheating, cozenage, craft, craftiness, crookedness, crookery, cunning, cunningness, deceitfulness, deception, deceptiveness, dishonesty, dissembling, dissimulation, double-dealing, dupery, duplicity, fakery, foxiness, fraud, guile, guilefulness, wiliness
RELATED WORDS:
equivocation, lying, mendacity, prevarication; chicane, chicanery, fraudulence, hanky-panky, jugglery, legerdemain, mountebankery, obliquity, skulduggery ( skullduggery), subterfuge, swindling, trickery, wile; falsehood, falsity, fib, untruth; hypocrisy, insincerity, sanctimoniousness, two-facedness; artfulness, caginess ( cageyness), deviousness, shrewdness; treacherousness, underhandedness, unscrupulousness; covertness, furtiveness, secrecy, shadiness, sneakiness, stealthiness; oiliness, shiftiness, slickness, slipperiness, slyness, smoothness
NEAR ANTONYMS:
candidness, candor, directness, frankness, openness, plainness, plainspokenness; honesty, probity; dependability, reliability, reliableness, solidity, trustability, trustiness, trustworthiness; decency, goodness, incorruptibility, integrity, righteousness, truthfulness, uprightness, virtuousness
artlessness, forthrightness, good faith, guilelessness, ingenuousness, sincerity
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