origin of the term hoodwinked - Search
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  1. Dictionary

    hood·wink
    [ˈho͝odˌwiNGk]
    verb
    hoodwinked (past tense) · hoodwinked (past participle)
    1. deceive or trick (someone):
      "an attempt to hoodwink the public"
    Origin
    mid 16th century (originally in the sense ‘to blindfold’): from the noun hood + an obsolete sense of wink ‘close the eyes’.
    Translate hoodwink to
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  3. 1560s, "to blindfold, blind by covering the eyes," from hood (n.1) + wink (n.); figurative sense of "blind the mind, mislead, deceive by disguise" is c. 1600.
    www.etymonline.com/word/hoodwink
    To hoodwink someone originally was to effectively do that kind of winking for the person; it meant to “cover someone’s eyes,” as with a hood or a blindfold. This 16th-century term soon came to be used figuratively for veiling the truth.
    www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/hoodwink
    To hoodwink someone is to deceive or fool them, and the word has a rather straightforward etymology, although the meaning of wink has changed over the centuries, and that can confuse present-day speakers. Hoodwink is a compound of hood + wink, two elements with roots in Proto-Germanic and which are still very much in use today.
    www.wordorigins.org/big-list-entries/hoodwink
    Having heard this word so often in movies, especially Westerns, one would think its origin is American. It comes as a bit of a surprise for most people that its origin goes back to Elizabethan England in the early 1600s. A hundred years earlier, in the 16th century, to wink meant to shut one’s eyes tightly.
    idiomorigins.org/origin/hoodwink
    The earliest known use of the noun hoodwink is in the late 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for hoodwink is from 1574, in the writing of John Baret, lexicographer. It is also recorded as a verb from the mid 1500s. hoodwink is formed within English, by conversion.
    www.oed.com/dictionary/hoodwink_n
     
  4. hoodwink — Wordorigins.org

  5. Hoodwink Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster

    WEBThis 16th-century term soon came to be used figuratively for veiling the truth. “The public ... is as easily hood-winked,” wrote the Irish physician Charles Lucas in 1756, by which time the figurative use had been …

  6. Idiom Origins - Hoodwink - History of Hoodwink

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  11. HOODWINK | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary

  12. hoodwink - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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