Swindler in a sentence as a noun

Shutting out a swindler isn't even close to the same thing.

That won't lock swindlers out, but it will force them to work quite a bit harder.

Shouldn't the world's greatest swindler be someone who's name we don't know?

So, you think Obama was a swindler and you voted for Trump?

But there's a difference between being scrappy and being a swindler.

My grandfather passed away about 6 months after the swindler was sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Grifter, swindler, price-gouger - all taking advantage of others in a bad way.

With "prey" there is the association "a person or thing that is the victim of an enemy, a swindler, a disease, etc.; gull.

The letter at the end by "Sten Kreuger" suggests that the spirit of the "world's greatest swindler" continues to run in the family.

The greatest swindler would be someone who everyone clearly knows is swindling them, but that they voluntarily do not stop.

Apart from that not so much - he was an ok stock swindler and a major copyright infringer which I guess is mildly interesting.

I know that's not the intended meaning here of course, but every time I hear it I immediately visualize a card game swindler on the street.

A swindler may not even need to establish a positive reputation to attract investment; a good story would likely suffice.

Was a single one of the philosophers who preceded me a psychologist at all, and not the very reverse of a psychologist—that is to say, a "superior swindler," an "Idealist"?

Turning to Webster: 1 superficially fair, reasonable, or valuable but often specious plausible pretext> 2 superficially pleasing or persuasive swindler , then a quack, then a smooth, plausible gentleman R. W. Emerson> 3 appearing worthy of belief To me, an idea is plausible if I can entertain the possibility without suspension of disbelief.

Swindler definitions

noun

a person who swindles you by means of deception or fraud

See also: defrauder chiseller chiseler gouger scammer grifter