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  1. decoy. noun [ C ] uk / ˈdiː.kɔɪ / us / ˈdiː.kɔɪ /. Add to word list. Add to word list. something or someone used to trick or confuse people, especially something or someone that is not what they appear to be: Air Force One flew ahead as a decoy, with the President in another plane behind.

  2. The meaning of DECOY is a pond into which wildfowl are lured for capture. How to use decoy in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Decoy.

  3. If you refer to something or someone as a decoy, you mean that they are intended to attract people's attention and deceive them. A plane was waiting at the airport with its engines running but this was just one of the decoys.

  4. Definition of decoy verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  5. DECOY meaning: someone or something used to lead a person or animal to a place so that they can be caught. Learn more.

  6. Decoy definition: a person who entices or lures another person or thing, as into danger, a trap, or the like.. See examples of DECOY used in a sentence.

  7. Define decoy. decoy synonyms, decoy pronunciation, decoy translation, English dictionary definition of decoy. decoy n. 1. a. A living or artificial bird or other animal used to entice game into a trap or within shooting range. b. An enclosed place, such as a pond,...

  8. If you refer to something or someone as a decoy, you mean that they are intended to attract people's attention and deceive them, for example, by leading them into a trap or away from a particular place.

  9. Decoy most often refers to bait used for trapping or killing an animal, but it can be any object or plan used to lead someone or something into trouble. Fisherman use worm decoys on their lures to catch fish, just like police use people as undercover decoys to catch criminals.

  10. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › DecoyDecoy - Wikipedia

    The word decoy, also originally found in English as "coy", derives from the Dutch de Kooi (the cage) and dates back to the early 17th century, when this type of duck trap was introduced to England from the Netherlands.

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