What is another word for bluffs?

Pronunciation: [blˈʌfs] (IPA)

Bluffs, often used to describe steep cliffs, can also be referred to using synonyms such as "cliff", "precipice", or "promontory". Other synonyms include "escarpment", "ridge", or "hilltop". In a more figurative sense, bluffs can also be described as "deception", "trickery", or "duplicity". When used in card games or gambling, bluffs refer to a player's attempt to deceive their opponents with a weak hand or false confidence, which can also be described as a "feint" or "fakeout". Regardless of the context, there are a multitude of words that can be used to describe the natural or figurative phenomenon of a bluff.

What are the paraphrases for Bluffs?

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What are the hypernyms for Bluffs?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Bluffs

He liked to lie out under the stars,-often when the men slept under tents,-his gun at his side and his thoughts back on the river bluffs at Leauvite.
"The Eye of Dread"
Payne Erskine
As he floated away, stark mad from excitement, fear, and hunger, he called back to the men to follow if they valued their lives; for a wave twenty feet high was coming down the river, carrying the towns along the bluffs with it.
"The Mystery of the Locks"
Edgar Watson Howe
There's three or four big bluffs a man could hide in, and if he was stuck for a horse he wouldn't care to try the open.
"A Prairie Courtship"
Harold Bindloss

Famous quotes with Bluffs

  • Life is like a game of poker. Sometimes it bluffs you. Sometimes you're down when you give it all you got and sometimes you have a full house. It can be predictable or unpredictable. Depends on how you live it.
    Shashank Khubchandani
  • Unpredictability is in general a fine protective feature, which should never be squandered but always spent wisely. There is much to be gained from communication if it is craftily doled out — enough truth to keep one's credibility high but enough falsehood to keep one's options open. (This is the first point of wisdom in the game of poker: he who never bluffs never wins; he who always bluffs always loses.)
    Daniel Dennett
  • To this period [age seven] I trace my worst faults. Indecision, for I found that by hesitating for a long time over two toys in a shop I would be given both and so was tempted to make two alternatives always seem equally attractive; Ingratitude, for I grew so used to having what I wanted that I assumed it as a right; Laziness, for sloth is the especial vice of tyrants; the Impatience with boredom that is generated by devotion; the Cruelty which comes from a knowledge of power and the Giving way to moods, for I learnt that sulking, crying, moping and malingering were bluffs that paid.
    Cyril Connolly
  • Nothing was said. And on crawled the little procession in the direction of Summerhouses, men and animals, men-animals, five souls. The pale red sun grazed the surface of the moorland bluffs on this northern winter's morning which was really only an evening. And yet it was midday. The light gilded the clouds of snow flying over the moors so that they seemed one unbroken ocean of fire, one radiant fire of gold with streaming flames and glimmering smoke from east to west over the whole frozen expanse. Through this golden fire of frost, comparable in its magic to nothing but the most powerful and elaborate witchcraft of the Ballads, lay their homeward way.
    Halldór Laxness

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