,| 1. | a crafty or underhanded device, maneuver, stratagem, or the like, intended to deceive or cheat; artifice; ruse; wile. |
| 2. | an optical illusion: It must have been some visual trick caused by the flickering candlelight. |
| 3. | a roguish or mischievous act; practical joke; prank: She likes to play tricks on her friends. |
| 4. | a mean, foolish, or childish action. |
| 5. | a clever or ingenious device or expedient; adroit technique: the tricks of the trade. |
| 6. | the art or knack of doing something skillfully: You seem to have mastered the trick of making others laugh. |
| 7. | a clever or dexterous feat intended to entertain, amuse, etc.: He taught his dog some amazing tricks. |
| 8. | a feat of magic or legerdemain: card tricks. |
| 9. | a behavioral peculiarity; trait; habit; mannerism. |
| 10. | a period of duty or turn; stint; tour of duty: I relieved the pilot after he had completed his trick at the wheel. |
| 11. | Cards.
|
| 12. | Informal. a child or young girl: a pretty little trick. |
| 13. | Slang.
|
| 14. | Heraldry.
|
| 15. | of, pertaining to, characterized by, or involving tricks: trick shooting. |
| 16. | designed or used for tricks: a trick chair. |
| 17. | (of a joint) inclined to stiffen or weaken suddenly and unexpectedly: a trick shoulder. |
| 18. | to deceive by trickery. |
| 19. | Heraldry. to indicate the tinctures of (a coat of arms) with engraver's tricks. |
| 20. | to cheat or swindle (usually fol. by out of): to trick someone out of an inheritance. |
| 21. | to beguile by trickery (usually fol. by into). |
| 22. | to practice trickery or deception; cheat. |
| 23. | to play tricks; trifle (usually fol. by with). |
| 24. | Slang. to engage in sexual acts for hire. |
| 25. | trick out, Informal. to embellish or adorn with or as if with ornaments or other attention-getting devices. |
| 26. | do or turn the trick, to achieve the desired effect or result: Another turn of the pliers should do the trick. |
| 27. | turn a trick, Slang. (of a prostitute) to engage in a sexual act with a customer. |

trick (trĭk) n.
To cheat or deceive or to practice trickery or deception. adj.
trick out/up Informal To ornament or adorn, often garishly: was all tricked out in beads and fringe. Idiom(s): do/turn the trickTo bring about the desired result. Idiom(s): how's tricks Informal Used to make a friendly inquiry about a person or that person's affairs. Idiom(s): not miss a trickTo be extremely alert: The teacher was known for not missing a trick. [Middle English trik, from Old North French trique, from trikier, to deceive, probably from Vulgar Latin *triccāre, from Latin trīcārī, to play tricks, from trīcae, tricks.] trick'er n. |
trick out
Ornament or adorn, especially ostentatiously or garishly, as in She was all tricked out in beads and fringe and what-have-you. This term uses trick in the sense of "dress up" or "decorate," a usage dating from about 1500. [Early 1700s]