rascality

  • 121wickedness — n 1. iniquity, evil, vice, improbity, sin, sinfulness, deviltry, ungodliness, godlessness; irreverence, impiety, irreligiousness; nefariousness, flagitiousness, heinousness; vileness, viciousness, badness, baseness, foulness, meanness; opprobrium …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 122roguery — ro•guer•y [[t]ˈroʊ gə ri[/t]] n. pl. guer•ies 1) roguish conduct; rascality 2) playful mischief • Etymology: 1590–1600 …

    From formal English to slang

  • 123roguery — /ˈroʊgəri/ (say rohguhree) noun (plural rogueries) 1. roguish conduct; rascality. 2. a rascally act; playful mischief. {rogu(e) + ery} …

  • 124dishonesty — [n] lying; unwillingness to tell the truth artifice, bunk, cheating, chicane, chicanery, corruption, craft, criminality, crookedness, cunning, deceit, double dealing, duplicity, faithlessness, falsehood, falsity, flimflam*, fourberie, fraud,… …

    New thesaurus

  • 125mischief — [n] trouble, damage atrocity, catastrophe, devilment, devilry, dirty trick*, evil, fault, friskiness, frolicsomeness, funny business*, gag, harm, high jinks*, hurt, ill, impishness, injury, misbehavior, mischievousness, misconduct, misdoing,… …

    New thesaurus

  • 126scoundrel — /skawndral/ An opprobrious epithet, implying rascality, villainy, or a want of honor or integrity. In slander, this word is not actionable per se …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 127rascal — ► NOUN ▪ a mischievous or cheeky person. DERIVATIVES rascality noun rascally adjective. ORIGIN originally in the senses «a mob» and «member of the rabble»: from Old French rascaille rabble …

    English terms dictionary

  • 128rascally — rascal ► NOUN ▪ a mischievous or cheeky person. DERIVATIVES rascality noun rascally adjective. ORIGIN originally in the senses «a mob» and «member of the rabble»: from Old French rascaille rabble …

    English terms dictionary