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  1. Dictionary
    Sly
    /slī/

    adjective

  2. The meaning of SLY is wise in practical affairs. How to use sly in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Sly.

  3. SLY definition: 1. deceiving people in a clever way in order to get what you want: 2. seeming to know secrets: 3…. Learn more.

  4. When you're sly, you're crafty, cunning, tricky, and wily. Being sly is being deceitful, though not in the worst way. If you're good at lying, you're quite sly: people who are sly are good at pulling one over on other people. Being sly helps you get away with things.

  5. A sly look, expression, or remark shows that you know something that other people do not know or that was meant to be a secret. His lips were spread in a sly smile. He gave me a sly, meaningful look.

  6. adjective. comparative: slyer or slier [slahy, -er],superlative: slyest or sliest [slahy, -ist]. cunning or wily: sly as a fox. Synonyms: astute, shrewd, crafty, foxy, subtle, artful. Antonyms: obvious, direct. stealthy, insidious, or secret.

  7. SLY definition: 1. deceiving people in a clever way to get what you want 2. a smile that shows you know something…. Learn more.

  8. secretly; not wanting other people to discover what you are doing. He has to visit them on the sly. Definition of sly adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. Sly Definition. Skillful or clever. Skillful at trickery or deceit; crafty; wily. Stealthy or surreptitious. Took a sly look at the letter on the table. Showing a secretive, crafty, or wily nature; cunningly underhanded. Mischievous in a playful way; roguish. Slyly. took extra payments on the sly.

  10. 1. Clever or cunning, especially in the practice of deceit. 2. Stealthy or surreptitious: took a sly look at the letter on the table. 3. Playfully mischievous: a sly laugh. Idiom: on the sly. In a way intended to escape notice: took extra payments on the sly. [Middle English sleigh, from Old Norse slœgr .] sly′ly adv. sly′ness n.

  11. If you describe someone as sly, you disapprove of them because they keep their feelings or intentions hidden and are clever at deceiving people.

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