0 a way of deceiving someone so that they do something that you want them to do -- уловка, хитрость
[ + to do sth ] The story was just a ruse to get her out of the house.
Rather than revise the ruse of cooperation that he devised to protect his political domain, he blamed corrupted evidence.
Efforts made at supposed conciliation were a ruse.
On this gloomy account liberalism is a ruse, the story the ruling classes tell themselves and their subjects.
A ruse was to cheat at the medical by sending a person who looked healthy, or by manipulating blood pressure.
A denial of the clock, of being professionally on-time or amateurishly late, is a disingenuous ruse.
Few if any of his words can be taken at face value, in light of the ruse he is perpetrating, but even if insincere they are cutting.
Bluebeard too, it will be remembered, absents himself from home on a business trip as a ruse to test his prospective or newly-wedded wife.
We have had a series of fertile little ruses—a sort of "petite astuce"—to make the settlement work.