0 past simple and past participle of hoodwink
1 to deceive or trick someone:
He hoodwinked us into agreeing.
He shall know at a glance the festive theatre and the stern hall of hoodwinked justice, the modest hospital and the patrician palace.
Who exactly expresses this desire to be hoodwinked?
That is how we were treated, and, therefore, the men are forewarned and forearmed, and they are not now going to be hoodwinked.
Nor will they deal sensibly with the problem of traffic congestion, a matter over which they have hoodwinked the public.
It may have been hoodwinked; it probably was hoodwinked.
Some here may think we are being deceived and hoodwinked, and by being deceived ourselves are deceiving others.
I believe that it is offensive also to members of the committee to suggest that we are liable to be hoodwinked by politically motivated staff.
We must bear it in mind that many of us are being hoodwinked.