Word
Of
The
Day
subterfuge
subterfuge \SUB-ter-fyooj\
noun
Subterfuge is a formal word that refers to the use of tricks to hide, avoid, or get something.
// They obtained the documents by
subterfuge.
See the entry >
Examples:
“Despite her difficult childhood,
Mavis [Gallant] persevered, through grit,
bloody-mindedness, an absence of self-pity, and an ironic sense of humor. Lunch with her was always hilarious and often horrifying: the tales she told about her life exceeded in unlikely gruesomeness even her own fiction. She certainly had the ‘cold eye’ that Yeats recommended for writers, and she saw through
subterfuge, no matter who was trying it on.” — Margaret Atwood,
The New Yorker, 6 Apr. 2025
Did you know?
Though
subterfuge is a synonym of
deception,
fraud,
double-dealing, and
trickery, there’s nothing tricky about the word’s etymology. English borrowed the word with its meaning from the Late Latin noun
subterfugium, which in turn comes from the Latin verb
subterfugere, meaning “to escape, evade.” That word combines the prefix
subter-, meaning “secretly” (from the adverb
subter, meaning “underneath”) with the verb
fugere, which means “to flee” and which is also the source of words such as
fugitive and
refuge, among others.