knave - translation to spanish
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knave - translation to spanish

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Knavery; Knave (disambiguation); Knave (magazine)

knave         
sota
bribón
granuja
bellaco
knavery         
granujada
sota      
jack
knave
old bag

Definition

knave
(knaves)
1.
If someone calls a man a knave, they mean that he is dishonest and should not be trusted. (OLD-FASHIONED)
= rogue, scoundrel
N-COUNT [disapproval]
2.
In card games, knave is another word for jack
. (mainly BRIT; in AM, use jack
)
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Knave

Knave may refer to:

  • A rogue (vagrant), a rascal, deceitful fellow, a dishonest man
  • Knave (playing card), another name for the jack in card games
  • Knave (British magazine), a British softcore pornographic magazine published 1968-2015
  • Knave (American magazine), a short-lived American men's magazine published in 1959
  • The Knave, a Welsh hillfort also known as Deborah's Hole Camp
  • In Knights and Knaves logic puzzles, a person who always lies
  • A male domestic worker, a person who works within the employer's household (kitchen boy in Middle English)
Examples of use of knave
1. It seems that Mr Mills‘s defence would be that he has been a fool rather than a knave.
2. Every contest seemed to feature a scoundrel vs. a knave, a hack vs. an idiot, a doofus vs. a dolt.
3. "It used to be the lecturn bible but after we had it restored in 2000 we put it on display in a locked case in the Knave.
4. Such colorful propagandists –– some still poorly identified –– as "Martin Marprelate," "Pasquil Cavaliero of England" and "Cuthbert Curry–Knave" punctuated the Elizabethan literary scene.
5. Kewell claimed that the article accused him of being a fool, and implied he was a "knave" guilty of dishonourable conduct.