different between deceptively vs eyewash

deceptively

English

Etymology

deceptive +? -ly

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /d??s?pt?vli/

Adverb

deceptively (comparative more deceptively, superlative most deceptively)

  1. In a deceptive manner; misleadingly
    • Australian Law Dictionary "deceptively similar" Oxford Reference
      A trade mark is deceptively similar to another trade mark if it so nearly resembles that other trade mark that it is likely to deceive or cause confusion
    • 2006 February 10, Dorian Lynskey "Readers recommend: joyous songs" The Guardian
      those deceptively jaunty tunes that mask less-than- cheerful lyrics
  2. actually but not apparently
    • 2015 February 12, Alison Spiegel, "Deceptively Easy Valentine's Day Recipes" HuffPost
      We've rounded up 26 recipes that sound, look and taste difficult but are actually really easy. ... try one of these deceptively easy but wildly impressive recipes.
    • 2015 September 3, Frances O'Rourke, "‘Deceptively spacious’ fits the bill in Dalkey for €1.575m" The Irish Times
      The “deceptively spacious” cliche is accurate in the case of this house near the corner of Castlepark Road and Hyde Road: from the front, it looks like a traditional 1930s home. But the current owners, who moved here 23 years ago, have extended it three times since then; now, with two levels at the back, it has 346sq m (3,725sq ft) of space.
    • 2018 May 7, Phil Harrison "Monday’s best TV: Genderquake" The Guardian
      what seems like a complex situation is actually deceptively simple
    • 2020 November 9, Adrian Horton, "A Teacher review – intriguing yet incomplete drama about grooming" The Guardian
      Over 20-25 minute episodes, A Teacher shows us what should seem to be a transparent case of grooming: Claire (Kate Mara), a quiet, deceptively self-destructive new high school English teacher in Austin, Texas, and her 17-year-old student-turned-lover, Eric (Love Simon’s Nick Robinson).
  3. apparently but not actually
    • 1968 October 29, Leonard P. Moore, Bertino v. Polish Ocean Line, 402 F.2d 963, 866 (2 Cir. 1968)
      The trial court found that the crewman who had spread the sawdust over the oil had made the situation more dangerous by creating a deceptively safe condition, resulting in a "trap" and an unseaworthy condition.
    • 2020 December 27, Steve Nadis, "After Centuries, a Simple Math Problem Gets an Exact Solution" Wired
      Mathematicians have long pondered a deceptively easy puzzle about the reach of a goat tied to a fence. Until now, they’ve only found approximate answers.

Usage notes

Senses 2 and 3 are opposite and it may be impossible to infer from the context which sense is intended in a given case.

Translations

deceptively From the web:

  • what deceptively means
  • what does deceptively mean
  • what does deceptively simple mean
  • what does deceptively spacious mean
  • what does deceptively small mean
  • what does deceptively easy meaning
  • what does deceptively casual mean
  • what does deceptively


eyewash

English

Etymology

eye +? wash

Pronunciation

Noun

eyewash (usually uncountable, plural eyewashes)

  1. (countable, uncountable) A soothing medicated lotion for the eyes
  2. (uncountable, slang) Nonsense; flattery; pretentiousness.

Synonyms

  • (slang): window dressing

Translations

Verb

eyewash (third-person singular simple present eyewashes, present participle eyewashing, simple past and past participle eyewashed)

  1. To fool with nonsense or flattery.
  2. (intelligence) To keep information secret by sending false information to many people in one's own organization, and correct information to a select few.

See also

  • eyebath

Anagrams

  • yeehaws

eyewash From the web:

  • what eyewashes use tap water
  • what eyewash means
  • eyewash what does it mean
  • what is eyewash used for
  • what is eyewash used for in a lab
  • what are eyewash stations used for
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  • what does eyewash mean in baseball
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