Need another word that means the same as “trap”? Find 63 synonyms and 30 related words for “trap” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Trap” are: snare, bunker, sand trap, cakehole, gob, hole, maw, yap, ambuscade, ambush, lying in wait, net, lure, decoy, bait, trick, stratagem, ploy, ruse, wile, deception, artifice, subterfuge, device, trickery, mouth, jaws, lips, immobilise, immobilize, pin, ensnare, entrap, trammel, pin down, confine, catch, cut off, corner, drive into a corner, pen, hem in, close in, shut in, hedge in, imprison, hold captive, get stuck, get caught, dupe, deceive, cheat, inveigle, beguile, fool, hoodwink, seduce, cajole, wheedle, gull
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “trap” as a noun can have the following definitions:
ambuscade | An ambush. Our sensibilities are being battered with reports of killings and ambuscades. |
ambush | A surprise attack by people lying in wait in a concealed position. Seven members of a patrol were killed in an ambush. |
artifice | Clever or cunning devices or expedients, especially as used to trick or deceive others. An industry dominated by artifice. |
bait | Food placed on a hook or in a net, trap, or fishing area to entice fish or other animals as prey. Herrings make excellent bait for pike. |
bunker | A fortification of earth; mostly or entirely below ground. A coal bunker. |
cakehole | A person’s mouth. You might at least have the courtesy to keep your cakehole closed. |
deception | A misleading falsehood. A range of elaborate deceptions. |
decoy | A beguiler who leads someone into danger (usually as part of a plot. A decoy duck. |
device | A drawing or design. A device intended to conserve water. |
gob | A small lump. A gob of phlegm. |
hole | An opening deliberately made in or through something. Intriguing as it sounds the theory is full of holes. |
jaws | Holding device consisting of one or both of the opposing parts of a tool that close to hold an object. |
lips | Either of two fleshy folds of tissue that surround the mouth and play a role in speaking. |
lure | Something used to lure fish or other animals into danger so they can be trapped or killed. The film industry always has been a glamorous lure for young girls. |
lying in wait | A statement that deviates from or perverts the truth. |
maw | The mouth or gullet of a greedy person. A gigantic wolfhound with a fearful gaping maw. |
mouth | An opening that resembles a mouth as of a cave or a gorge. Sand from the beach is silting up the harbour mouth. |
net | Game equipment consisting of a strip of netting dividing the playing area in tennis or badminton. Wales did find the net in the 32nd minute. |
ploy | A cunning plan or action designed to turn a situation to one’s own advantage. The president has dismissed the referendum as a ploy to buy time. |
ruse | A deceptive maneuver (especially to avoid capture. Emma tried to think of a ruse to get Paul out of the house. |
sand trap | Fortitude and determination. |
snare | Strings stretched across the lower head of a snare drum they make a rattling sound when the drum is hit. It was all a snare and delusion. |
stratagem | Skill in devising plans or schemes; cunning. A series of devious stratagems. |
subterfuge | Something intended to misrepresent the true nature of an activity. He wasn t sick it was just a subterfuge. |
trick | (in bridge, whist, and similar card games) a sequence of cards forming a single round of play. One card is laid down by each player, the highest card being the winner. I thought I saw a flicker of emotion but it was probably a trick of the light. |
trickery | Verbal misrepresentation intended to take advantage of you in some way. The dealer resorted to trickery. |
wile | The use of tricks to deceive someone (usually to extract money from them. She didn t employ any feminine wiles to capture his attention. |
yap | A person’s mouth. He should keep his yap shut. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “trap” as a verb can have the following definitions:
beguile | Trick (someone) into doing something. He beguiled the voters with his good looks. |
cajole | Persuade (someone) to do something by sustained coaxing or flattery. He hoped to cajole her into selling the house. |
catch | Be the catcher. Don t catch your meaning. |
cheat | Be sexually unfaithful to one’s partner in marriage. She cheats on her husband. |
close in | Come together, as if in an embrace. |
confine | Restrict or confine. You ve confined yourself to what you know. |
corner | Establish a corner in a commodity. The man was eventually cornered by police dogs. |
cut off | Cut off the testicles of male animals such as horses. |
deceive | Fail to admit to oneself that something is true. I didn t intend to deceive people into thinking it was French champagne. |
drive into a corner | Proceed along in a vehicle. |
dupe | Fool or hoax. The newspaper was duped into publishing an untrue story. |
ensnare | Catch in or as in a trap. They were ensnared in city centre traffic. |
entrap | Trick (someone) into committing a crime in order to secure their prosecution. Discarded fishing lines can entrap wildlife. |
fool | Make a fool or dupe of. You can t fool me. |
get caught | Apprehend and reproduce accurately. |
get stuck | Evoke an emotional response. |
gull | Fool or hoax. |
hedge in | Hinder or restrict with or as if with a hedge. |
hem in | Utter `hem’ or `ahem. |
hold captive | Be in accord; be in agreement. |
hoodwink | Influence by slyness. Staff were hoodwinked into thinking the cucumber was a sawn off shotgun. |
immobilise | To hold fast or prevent from moving. |
immobilize | Prohibit the conversion or use of (assets. Fear immobilized her. |
imprison | Confine as if in a prison. His daughters are virtually imprisoned in their own house he does not let them go out without a chaperone. |
inveigle | Influence or urge by gentle urging, caressing, or flattering. We cannot inveigle him into putting pen to paper. |
lure | Tempt (a person or animal) to do something or to go somewhere, especially by offering some form of reward. He lured me into temptation. |
pen | Produce a literary work. Olivia penned award winning poetry. |
pin | Pierce with a pin. Her hair was pinned back. |
pin down | Pierce with a pin. |
shut in | Become closed. |
snare | Catch a bird or mammal in a snare. The foxes were humanely snared. |
trammel | Catch in or as if in a trap. We have no wish to be trammelled by convention. |
trick | Sketch (a coat of arms) in outline, with the colours indicated by letters or signs. Many people have been tricked by villains with false identity cards. |
wheedle | Influence or urge by gentle urging, caressing, or flattering. She wheedled her way on to the guest list. |
bait | Lure entice or entrap with bait. The other boys revelled in baiting him about his love of literature. |
bound | Bound by contract. A bound official. |
cavity | (anatomy) a natural hollow or sinus within the body. The abdominal cavity. |
comb | Straighten with a comb. Comb the wool. |
dint | Mark (a surface) with dents or hollows. The soft dints at the top of a coconut. |
disentangle | Release from entanglement of difficulty. It was difficult to disentangle fact from fiction. |
ensnare | Catch in or as in a trap. They were ensnared in city centre traffic. |
entrap | Take or catch as if in a snare or trap. He argued that his client had been entrapped by an undercover police officer. |
extricate | Free (someone or something) from a constraint or difficulty. He was trying to extricate himself from official duties. |
hole | Hit the ball into the hole. He shot holes in my argument. |
lariat | A long noosed rope used to catch animals. |
lasso | Catch with a lasso. At last his father lassoed the horse. |
loiter | Walk slowly and with no apparent purpose; dawdle. The weather had tempted them to loiter along the banks of the Cherwell. |
lurk | Read the postings in an internet forum without actively contributing. You ll soon learn the lurks and perks. |
obstacle | A thing that blocks one’s way or prevents or hinders progress. The poverty of a district is an obstacle to good education. |
peephole | A small hole that may be looked through, especially one in a door through which callers may be identified before the door is opened. She peered through the security peephole in the solid oak door. |
perdition | (in Christian theology) a state of eternal punishment and damnation into which a sinful and unrepentant person passes after death. Hurl d headlong To bottomless perdition there to dwell. |
pit | An orchestra pit. He pitted on lap 36 with sudden engine trouble. |
pitfall | A trap in the form of a concealed hole. The pitfalls of buying goods at public auctions. |
shackle | Chain with shackles. The prisoner was shackled to the heavy steel chair in the centre of the room. |
snare | Catch a bird or mammal in a snare. The foxes were humanely snared. |
solve | Find the solution. Solve for x. |
tied | Fastened with strings or cords. A neatly tied bundle. |
trammel | Place limits on (extent or access. We have no wish to be trammelled by convention. |
unearth | Recover through digging. The CIA unearthed a plot to kill the President. |
unknot | Become or cause to become undone by separating the fibers or threads of. His shoulders unknotted. |
unravel | (of an intricate process, system, or arrangement) disintegrate or be destroyed. They were attempting to unravel the cause of death. |
unscramble | Restore (something that has been scrambled) to an intelligible, readable, or viewable state. But how do we unscramble our feelings. |
untangle | Free from a tangled or twisted state. He knew he d have to untangle a financial mess and somehow restore investor confidence. |
unwary | Not alert to danger or deception. Some thieves prey especially on unwary travelers. |
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