illude
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ɪˈluːd/
Audio (General American): (file) - (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ɪˈluːd/, /ɪˈljuːd/
Audio (Southern England): (file) Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -uːd
- Homophones: allude, elude (weak vowel merger)
Verb
illude (third-person singular simple present illudes, present participle illuding, simple past and past participle illuded)
- (literary) To give a false impression to.
- 1547, Catherine Parr, The Lamentation of a Sinner,[1]:
- The fleshly children of Adam bee so politicke, subtil, craftie, and wise, in theyre kynde, that the electe should be illuded if it were possible:
- 1611, John Donne, An Anatomy of the World[2], London: Samuel Macham:
- Tis now but wicked vanity to thinke,
To color vitious deeds with good pretence,
Or with bought colors to illude mens sense.
- 1786, William Gilpin, Observations, Relative Chiefly to Picturesque Beauty, Made in the Year 1772[3], London: R. Blamire, Vol. 1, Section 6, p. 86:
- The lines and shapes of mountains (features strongly marked) are easily caught and retained: but these meteor-forms, this rich fluctuation of airy hues, offer such a profusion of variegated splendor, that they are continually illuding the eye with breaking into each other; and are lost, as it endeavours to retain them.
- 1873, Henry Coppée, chapter 26, in English Literature, Considered as an Interpreter of English History[4], Philadelphia: Claxton, Remsen & Haffelfinger, page 269:
- His [Jonathan Swift’s] versatile pen was prolific […] of fiction erected of impossible materials, and yet so creating and peopling a world of fancy as to illude the reader into temporary belief in its truth.
- 1984, Oliver Sacks, chapter 2, in A Leg to Stand On[5], New York: Summit Books, page 69:
- I had a sudden sense of mismatch, of profound incongruity—between what I imagined I felt and what I actually saw, between what I had thought and what I now found. I felt, for a dizzying, vertiginous moment, that I had been profoundly deceived, illuded, by my senses: an illusion—such an illusion—as I had never before known.
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
to delude, fool
Anagrams
Italian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ilˈlu.de/
- Rhymes: -ude
- Hyphenation: il‧lù‧de
Verb
illude
- third-person singular present indicative of illudere
Anagrams
Latin
Verb
illūde
- second-person singular present active imperative of illūdō