After eight years of financial chicanery, he concludes, the Chancellor has produced an Enron for Africa. [noun]
4
Knowing British chicanery, Mr Post was right not to be surprised. [noun]
3
He fell prey to political chicanery. [noun]
0
Yet even a flock of sheep would resist the chicanery of the State, if it were not for the corruptive, tyrannical, and oppressive methods it employs to serve its purposes. [noun]
0
And I suppose all that chicanery afterward was necessary, too. [Please select]
0
A wearisome period of endless dispute, chicanery, and wrangling followed this decision. [Please select]
0
As Dennis put it, there was "any amount of chicanery about the whole affair." [Please select]
0
The attempt, at present, would lead to partiality, chicanery, and every kind of fraud. [Please select]
0
I dismiss the whole thing as a rather less than subtle bit of market-manipulation chicanery. [Please select]
0
In his dealings with other nations his diplomacy included all the arts of chicanery and deceit. [Please select]
0
No persuasion or bribery or confounded chicanery could induce YOU to deceive me on this point. [Please select]
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