You know what it looks likeā¦ but what is it called?
TAKE THE QUIZTrending: ācon manā
Lookups spiked 800% on February 27, 2019
Con man sweet-talked its way to the top of our lookups on February 27th, 2019, following reports that Michael Cohen, Donald Trumpās former lawyer, planned on using this term as a descriptor of his erstwhile client in testimony to be given before Congress later today.
Michael Cohen, President Trumpās former lawyer, plans to tell Congress on Wednesday that Mr. Trump is a ācon manā and a ācheatā who knew an adviser was communicating with WikiLeaks about the release of Democratic emails that were hacked by Russia.
ā The New York Times, 27 Feb. 2019
Con man, a shortened form of confidence man, is defined as āa person who tricks other people in order to get their money.ā
Confidence has existed in English as a noun (āa feeling or consciousness of one's powers or of reliance on one's circumstancesā) since Middle English, and may be traced back to the latin confÄ«dens (ātrusting in oneself, confidentā). The adjectival sense of confidence (āof, relating to, or adept at swindling by false promisesā) appears to date from the 19th century.
The Confidence Man Again.āIt is an old saying, and a very true one, nevertheless, that āall the fools are not yet dead in the world,> and so we find it, by the old trick recently revived, and practiced, a few days ago, on one of the intelligent merchants of our city.
ā New York Herald, 28 Nov. 1848John Quinn, of Pittsburg, complained to the police yesterday that he had been robbed of $280 in cash, $270 in pool tickets, and an $85 gold watch by Samuel Goodman, a āconā man, who rung in loaded dice on him while in a State street saloon.
ā Daily Inter Ocean (Chicago, IL), 5 Aug. 1881
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