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单词 counterfeit
释义

Definition of counterfeit in English:

counterfeit

adjective ˈkaʊntəfiːtˈkaʊntəfɪtˈkaʊn(t)ərˌfɪt
  • 1Made in exact imitation of something valuable with the intention to deceive or defraud.

    伪造的;仿造的

    counterfeit £10 notes
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Typical offenses are growing cannabis, circulating counterfeit money, theft, homicide, and entering the country illegally.
    • His scheme was revealed as he allegedly attempted to transfer $80 million in funds from legitimate accounts into accounts he controlled using fraudulent wire transfers and counterfeit cheques.
    • You see them on lots of New York City street corners: counterfeit T-shirts, bootleg DVDs, fake designer handbags.
    • Three years on, it has become the centre for trade in contraband and counterfeit goods.
    • They're knockoffs, fakes, counterfeit goods that may end up as holiday gifts, but they are hurting the U.S. economy.
    • ‘Most companies are fully willing to help identify counterfeiters, counterfeit goods and to provide testimony in court,’ Harris said.
    • The supposedly copy-proof format is providing rich pickings for pirates, and counterfeit versions of the latest films are hitting market stalls at the same time as they reach the cinema.
    • HM Customs at Heathrow also seized 1,000 counterfeit copies of Windows 95 OEM, destined for MST.
    • They are telling of all sorts of irregularities from fee-taking for moving an application to the top of the queue, to outright fraudulent and counterfeit work permits.
    • Anti-theft tags will be fitted to laptops, compact discs and clothing consignments as part of a partnership initiative with major UK businesses to stamp out the illicit trade in stolen and counterfeit goods.
    • The whole thing boils down to verification once again, where people cannot use fraudulent, counterfeit identification to obtain the right to drive in this country.
    • UK computer retailers are warned today of a sophisticated new scam involving counterfeit cheques.
    • Not to mention that there is a strong connection between counterfeit goods and organized crime gangs and terrorist organizations - it's one way they finance their organizations.
    • Mr Cameron added that when these forged and counterfeit documents were sent to immigration officials in Sheffield they were ignored, and approval was given.
    • There is a significant black market in both real and counterfeit human growth hormone promoted to sportspeople and fitness people.
    • Jenn, there is no way you would be able to tell me that this wasn't a counterfeit bill.
    • A daring nighttime police raid of the night market on Thepprasit Road netted 350 counterfeit CDs and resulted in the arrest of two vendors.
    • Martin works in Buenos Aires as a courier for a crime outfit, transporting counterfeit money.
    • The fact that there is in effect only ever one customs barrier for goods to enter the EC also has implications for the battle against organized crime, counterfeit goods, and the like.
    • Its primary focus is on cases relating to fraud, corruption, counterfeit goods and tax offences and focuses on assuring that appropriate sentences are meted out in courts.
    Synonyms
    fake, faked, copied, forged, feigned, simulated, sham, spurious, bogus, imitation, substitute, dummy, ersatz
    informal knock-off, pirate, pirated, phoney, pseud, pseudo
    British informal, dated cod
    1. 1.1 Pretended; sham.
      〈古〉假装的;虚假的
      a counterfeit image of reality
      Example sentencesExamples
      • He gave a counterfeit cough.
      • These are the 22-minute sitcom's ‘serious’ interludes, usually signified by fifteen seconds unbroken by a counterfeit laugh.
      • Like a mirage in a desert, counterfeit love cannot quench your thirst.
      • Conceivably this is so, but in the present moral climate it is more likely to foster that counterfeit compassion which thinks no wrong is very wrong.
      • Leave it to Hollywood to trim the truth for the sake of counterfeit sentiment and narrative noodling.
      • The counterfeit nature of Modernism's dream of freedom is written into the dream's realization.
noun ˈkaʊntəfiːtˈkaʊntəfɪtˈkaʊn(t)ərˌfɪt
  • A fraudulent imitation of something else.

    伪造物;赝品

    he knew the tapes to be counterfeits

    他知道这些磁带都是仿冒品。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Although, even traditional pharmacies have had problems with counterfeits from their wholesalers, at least if they're certified there's some accountability.
    • Gary was hesitant to speak much more about identifying the counterfeits or rip-offs.
    • First, McConnell openly criticised the Chancellor's decision to force whisky producers to introduce security seals as protection against counterfeits and smuggling.
    • The dangers of the counterfeits were highlighted in a national newspaper after packets of Benson and Hedges turned up with the word ‘suppliers’ misspelt as ‘suppuiers’.
    • Some name-brand items with ‘too good to be true ‘prices may even be counterfeits.’
    • Stressing that genuine bottles of both brands are unaffected and safe, Trading Standards says there are clear ways of identifying the counterfeits.
    • The counterfeits were alleged to be some of the best ever, identifiable only by a slightly lighter shade of blue.
    • He was a virtuoso fabulist, whose literary hoaxes and counterfeits verged on pastiche.
    • The other reason to mount an offensive against the counterfeits is, obviously, the hit to corporate profits - and the likelihood developed markets will one day be seriously contaminated.
    • Banks and governments need to detect counterfeits.
    • Meanwhile, the FDA says it will tighten requirements for drug wholesalers so it's tougher to sneak counterfeits into legitimate supplies.
    • Huge machines process hundreds of thousands of bills and coins, counting up the take and looking for counterfeits.
    • Most holiday-makers today know that coins, antiques and other objects of fine arts offered on the streets or found in markets are counterfeits or nice imitations.
    • On its pre-season tour of America, the club seized 600 counterfeits, including t-shirts and caps, while issuing 35 banning orders to firms suspected of peddling fakes there.
    • Other street vendors gave up on selling counterfeits because they said they were tired of being questioned by police, and feared getting caught.
    • These coins could be shrink wrapped with an embedded microdot to assure authenticity, preventing counterfeits or forgeries.
    • The public should feel proud of refusing counterfeits and buying copyrighted products.
    • But the same production and distribution also have created a frightening phenomenon: an ever-rising flood of counterfeits and fakes coming onto world markets.
    • Studio executives say the counterfeits and free downloads off the Internet threaten to undercut their industry, as it did with the music industry.
    • Legitimate businesses are hurt by the loss of sales going to counterfeits and pirated goods and services.
    Synonyms
    fake, forgery, copy, reproduction, replica, imitation, likeness, lookalike, mock-up, dummy, substitute, fraud, sham
    informal phoney, pirate, knock-off, rip-off, put-on, dupe
verb ˈkaʊntəfiːtˈkaʊntəfɪtˈkaʊn(t)ərˌfɪt
[with object]
  • 1Imitate fraudulently.

    伪造;仿冒

    my signature is extremely hard to counterfeit

    我的签名是极难仿冒的。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And, short of reproducing the process, but with a new name on the credits page, it would be very hard to counterfeit this.
    • All of the other prisoners are gorgeous trained dancers who sing about how they committed murders, counterfeited money, robbed banks and exacted revenge.
    • They are both now charged with very serious crimes - counterfeiting money and murder.
    • Color-shifting ink is not only hard to counterfeit, it looks good too.
    • Our organisation owns shares in a lot of these but we deal in theft, blackmail and counterfeiting.
    • According to the all-time list, assault is the favourite crime of pro sports people - 17 arrests described in detail - with narcotics, burglary, counterfeiting and murder among the other top pastimes.
    • The games are hard to counterfeit because players must connect to a server, which can detect and reject software pirates.
    • The idea is to prevent large-scale piracy operations from thieves who counterfeit Symantec programs and offer them to customers on the Web.
    • For example, the private monies would be far more stable in their purchasing power, would be harder to counterfeit, and would be available in more convenient denominations.
    • According to Doc-Witness, OpSecure provides a solution that solves the four aspects of software piracy: copying, sharing, counterfeiting, and faking IDs.
    • Most often the perpetrators counterfeited credit cards owned by nationals of France, Italy, the UK, Germany, the US, Canada and Scandinavian countries.
    • Mr McDowell said he had no doubt some of the individuals in the IRA would continue with their lucrative smuggling and counterfeiting operations after the disbandment of the IRA.
    • Producers of leading wines are adopting security measures similar to those used on banknotes to stop criminals counterfeiting their products, writes John Follain.
    • If criminals can counterfeit passports and other I.D. then how long until they can fake the new Identity cards-biometrics or not.
    • The chip technology uses sophisticated processing techniques to identify authentic cards and make counterfeiting extremely difficult and expensive.
    • "One staff member of the organising committee will be stationed at each booth to make sure no booths conduct any piracy and counterfeiting activities, " Liu said.
    • It has successfully prosecuted all kinds of card fraudsters but has particularly focused on the scams carried out by counterfeiting gangs who often run sophisticated factory-style operations.
    • Would a nationally-issued identity document solve the problem of identity-related fraud, or would this be just another document that could be counterfeited and abused by fraudsters?
    • I see it as a protection measure for my money (anyone stealing my money must steal or counterfeit my ID first).
    • And coins are harder to counterfeit than gold bars.
    Synonyms
    fake, forge, copy, reproduce, replicate, imitate, simulate, feign, falsify, sham
    informal pirate
    1. 1.1 Pretend to feel or possess (an emotion or quality)
      佯作;假装
      no pretence could have counterfeited such terror

      那样的恐惧是怎么也装不出来的。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It is the taint of Eton that makes him ineligible to lead the Tory Party, in the view of some who believe that counterfeiting Blairism is the road to power.
      • You guys do the best at counterfeiting friendship.
      • Abigail, the daughter of Barabas, having counterfeited a religious vocation in order to help her father recover his money, eventually becomes a nun.
      • The dexterity with which he counterfeits sanity presents, to the metaphysician, one of the most singular problems in the study of mind.
      Synonyms
      pretend, make believe, feign, put on an act, act, sham, fake
    2. 1.2literary Resemble closely.
      〈诗/文〉酷似
      sleep counterfeited Death so well

      睡眠与死亡何其相似。

Derivatives

  • counterfeiter

  • noun ˈkaʊntəfɪtəˈkaʊn(t)ərˌfɪdər
    • Dave Broom, a leading whisky writer, said one counterfeiter was believed to be behind the scam.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The law was drawn up to target professional pirates, criminals and counterfeiters who make copies of goods such as football shirts or CDs.
      • Inadequate penalties will not deter pirates and counterfeiters - they will only ensure that such piracy will become more serious.
      • People's unfamiliarity with the new money is likely to attract counterfeiters and fraudsters.
      • More than a few counterfeiters never went to the bother of engraving imitations - they could often get copies of the real thing.

Origin

Middle English (as a verb): from Anglo-Norman French countrefeter, from Old French contrefait, past participle of contrefaire, from Latin contra- 'in opposition' + facere 'make'.

Definition of counterfeit in US English:

counterfeit

adjectiveˈkaʊn(t)ərˌfɪtˈkoun(t)ərˌfit
  • 1Made in exact imitation of something valuable or important with the intention to deceive or defraud.

    伪造的;仿造的

    two men were remanded on bail on a charge of passing counterfeit $10 bills

    因使用10英镑伪钞而被起诉的两个人被交保候审。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The fact that there is in effect only ever one customs barrier for goods to enter the EC also has implications for the battle against organized crime, counterfeit goods, and the like.
    • UK computer retailers are warned today of a sophisticated new scam involving counterfeit cheques.
    • HM Customs at Heathrow also seized 1,000 counterfeit copies of Windows 95 OEM, destined for MST.
    • His scheme was revealed as he allegedly attempted to transfer $80 million in funds from legitimate accounts into accounts he controlled using fraudulent wire transfers and counterfeit cheques.
    • Anti-theft tags will be fitted to laptops, compact discs and clothing consignments as part of a partnership initiative with major UK businesses to stamp out the illicit trade in stolen and counterfeit goods.
    • Its primary focus is on cases relating to fraud, corruption, counterfeit goods and tax offences and focuses on assuring that appropriate sentences are meted out in courts.
    • A daring nighttime police raid of the night market on Thepprasit Road netted 350 counterfeit CDs and resulted in the arrest of two vendors.
    • There is a significant black market in both real and counterfeit human growth hormone promoted to sportspeople and fitness people.
    • Jenn, there is no way you would be able to tell me that this wasn't a counterfeit bill.
    • Mr Cameron added that when these forged and counterfeit documents were sent to immigration officials in Sheffield they were ignored, and approval was given.
    • They are telling of all sorts of irregularities from fee-taking for moving an application to the top of the queue, to outright fraudulent and counterfeit work permits.
    • Not to mention that there is a strong connection between counterfeit goods and organized crime gangs and terrorist organizations - it's one way they finance their organizations.
    • The supposedly copy-proof format is providing rich pickings for pirates, and counterfeit versions of the latest films are hitting market stalls at the same time as they reach the cinema.
    • Typical offenses are growing cannabis, circulating counterfeit money, theft, homicide, and entering the country illegally.
    • Three years on, it has become the centre for trade in contraband and counterfeit goods.
    • The whole thing boils down to verification once again, where people cannot use fraudulent, counterfeit identification to obtain the right to drive in this country.
    • ‘Most companies are fully willing to help identify counterfeiters, counterfeit goods and to provide testimony in court,’ Harris said.
    • You see them on lots of New York City street corners: counterfeit T-shirts, bootleg DVDs, fake designer handbags.
    • Martin works in Buenos Aires as a courier for a crime outfit, transporting counterfeit money.
    • They're knockoffs, fakes, counterfeit goods that may end up as holiday gifts, but they are hurting the U.S. economy.
    Synonyms
    fake, faked, copied, forged, feigned, simulated, sham, spurious, bogus, imitation, substitute, dummy, ersatz
    1. 1.1 Pretended; sham.
      〈古〉假装的;虚假的
      a counterfeit image of reality
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Leave it to Hollywood to trim the truth for the sake of counterfeit sentiment and narrative noodling.
      • Like a mirage in a desert, counterfeit love cannot quench your thirst.
      • These are the 22-minute sitcom's ‘serious’ interludes, usually signified by fifteen seconds unbroken by a counterfeit laugh.
      • He gave a counterfeit cough.
      • The counterfeit nature of Modernism's dream of freedom is written into the dream's realization.
      • Conceivably this is so, but in the present moral climate it is more likely to foster that counterfeit compassion which thinks no wrong is very wrong.
nounˈkaʊn(t)ərˌfɪtˈkoun(t)ərˌfit
  • A fraudulent imitation of something else; a forgery.

    伪造物;赝品

    he knew the tapes to be counterfeits

    他知道这些磁带都是仿冒品。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The counterfeits were alleged to be some of the best ever, identifiable only by a slightly lighter shade of blue.
    • Stressing that genuine bottles of both brands are unaffected and safe, Trading Standards says there are clear ways of identifying the counterfeits.
    • Studio executives say the counterfeits and free downloads off the Internet threaten to undercut their industry, as it did with the music industry.
    • The other reason to mount an offensive against the counterfeits is, obviously, the hit to corporate profits - and the likelihood developed markets will one day be seriously contaminated.
    • Banks and governments need to detect counterfeits.
    • The public should feel proud of refusing counterfeits and buying copyrighted products.
    • Legitimate businesses are hurt by the loss of sales going to counterfeits and pirated goods and services.
    • Some name-brand items with ‘too good to be true ‘prices may even be counterfeits.’
    • These coins could be shrink wrapped with an embedded microdot to assure authenticity, preventing counterfeits or forgeries.
    • He was a virtuoso fabulist, whose literary hoaxes and counterfeits verged on pastiche.
    • First, McConnell openly criticised the Chancellor's decision to force whisky producers to introduce security seals as protection against counterfeits and smuggling.
    • Meanwhile, the FDA says it will tighten requirements for drug wholesalers so it's tougher to sneak counterfeits into legitimate supplies.
    • Huge machines process hundreds of thousands of bills and coins, counting up the take and looking for counterfeits.
    • Most holiday-makers today know that coins, antiques and other objects of fine arts offered on the streets or found in markets are counterfeits or nice imitations.
    • But the same production and distribution also have created a frightening phenomenon: an ever-rising flood of counterfeits and fakes coming onto world markets.
    • On its pre-season tour of America, the club seized 600 counterfeits, including t-shirts and caps, while issuing 35 banning orders to firms suspected of peddling fakes there.
    • Gary was hesitant to speak much more about identifying the counterfeits or rip-offs.
    • The dangers of the counterfeits were highlighted in a national newspaper after packets of Benson and Hedges turned up with the word ‘suppliers’ misspelt as ‘suppuiers’.
    • Although, even traditional pharmacies have had problems with counterfeits from their wholesalers, at least if they're certified there's some accountability.
    • Other street vendors gave up on selling counterfeits because they said they were tired of being questioned by police, and feared getting caught.
    Synonyms
    fake, forgery, copy, reproduction, replica, imitation, likeness, lookalike, mock-up, dummy, substitute, fraud, sham
verbˈkaʊn(t)ərˌfɪtˈkoun(t)ərˌfit
[with object]
  • 1Imitate fraudulently.

    伪造;仿冒

    my signature is extremely hard to counterfeit

    我的签名是极难仿冒的。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • All of the other prisoners are gorgeous trained dancers who sing about how they committed murders, counterfeited money, robbed banks and exacted revenge.
    • Color-shifting ink is not only hard to counterfeit, it looks good too.
    • And coins are harder to counterfeit than gold bars.
    • Our organisation owns shares in a lot of these but we deal in theft, blackmail and counterfeiting.
    • They are both now charged with very serious crimes - counterfeiting money and murder.
    • Producers of leading wines are adopting security measures similar to those used on banknotes to stop criminals counterfeiting their products, writes John Follain.
    • The games are hard to counterfeit because players must connect to a server, which can detect and reject software pirates.
    • The chip technology uses sophisticated processing techniques to identify authentic cards and make counterfeiting extremely difficult and expensive.
    • And, short of reproducing the process, but with a new name on the credits page, it would be very hard to counterfeit this.
    • For example, the private monies would be far more stable in their purchasing power, would be harder to counterfeit, and would be available in more convenient denominations.
    • The idea is to prevent large-scale piracy operations from thieves who counterfeit Symantec programs and offer them to customers on the Web.
    • I see it as a protection measure for my money (anyone stealing my money must steal or counterfeit my ID first).
    • According to Doc-Witness, OpSecure provides a solution that solves the four aspects of software piracy: copying, sharing, counterfeiting, and faking IDs.
    • "One staff member of the organising committee will be stationed at each booth to make sure no booths conduct any piracy and counterfeiting activities, " Liu said.
    • Mr McDowell said he had no doubt some of the individuals in the IRA would continue with their lucrative smuggling and counterfeiting operations after the disbandment of the IRA.
    • If criminals can counterfeit passports and other I.D. then how long until they can fake the new Identity cards-biometrics or not.
    • It has successfully prosecuted all kinds of card fraudsters but has particularly focused on the scams carried out by counterfeiting gangs who often run sophisticated factory-style operations.
    • Would a nationally-issued identity document solve the problem of identity-related fraud, or would this be just another document that could be counterfeited and abused by fraudsters?
    • Most often the perpetrators counterfeited credit cards owned by nationals of France, Italy, the UK, Germany, the US, Canada and Scandinavian countries.
    • According to the all-time list, assault is the favourite crime of pro sports people - 17 arrests described in detail - with narcotics, burglary, counterfeiting and murder among the other top pastimes.
    Synonyms
    fake, forge, copy, reproduce, replicate, imitate, simulate, feign, falsify, sham
    1. 1.1 Pretend to feel or possess (an emotion or quality)
      佯作;假装
      no pretense could have counterfeited such terror

      那样的恐惧是怎么也装不出来的。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • You guys do the best at counterfeiting friendship.
      • The dexterity with which he counterfeits sanity presents, to the metaphysician, one of the most singular problems in the study of mind.
      • It is the taint of Eton that makes him ineligible to lead the Tory Party, in the view of some who believe that counterfeiting Blairism is the road to power.
      • Abigail, the daughter of Barabas, having counterfeited a religious vocation in order to help her father recover his money, eventually becomes a nun.
      Synonyms
      pretend, make believe, feign, put on an act, act, sham, fake
    2. 1.2literary Resemble closely.
      〈诗/文〉酷似
      sleep counterfeited Death so well

      睡眠与死亡何其相似。

Origin

Middle English (as a verb): from Anglo-Norman French countrefeter, from Old French contrefait, past participle of contrefaire, from Latin contra- ‘in opposition’ + facere ‘make’.

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