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Manipulate   /mənˈɪpjəlˌeɪt/   Listen
Manipulate

verb
(past & past part. manipulated; pres. part. manipulating)
1.
Influence or control shrewdly or deviously.  Synonyms: pull strings, pull wires.
2.
Hold something in one's hands and move it.
3.
Tamper, with the purpose of deception.  Synonyms: cook, fake, falsify, fudge, misrepresent, wangle.  "Cook the books" , "Falsify the data"
4.
Manipulate in a fraudulent manner.  Synonym: rig.
5.
Control (others or oneself) or influence skillfully, usually to one's advantage.  Synonyms: control, keep in line.  "She is a very controlling mother and doesn't let her children grow up" , "The teacher knew how to keep the class in line" , "She keeps in line"
6.
Treat manually, as with massage, for therapeutic purposed.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Manipulate" Quotes from Famous Books



... was of that talented community of stupid women who understand and manipulate life through their super-instinct of sex merely; who know how to take all and give nothing; suckers of life and never feeders. She looked at him and sighed and smiled, and shook her head, and touching ...
— Married Life - The True Romance • May Edginton

... communities where they lived. From the nature of things the wise man and the idealist can never be contented with existing things, and their lives are a constant battle for change. If the anti-social individual should be punished, what of many of the profiteers and captains of industry who manipulate business and property for purely selfish ends? What of many of our great financiers who use every possible reform and conventional catch word as a means of affecting public opinion, so that they may control the resources of the ...
— Crime: Its Cause and Treatment • Clarence Darrow

... the wheel a fraction. "There's a jetty comes out there and I guess we'd better give it a good wide berth." Collars were pulled up to keep the moisture from creeping down necks, and Perry begged to be allowed to manipulate the fog-horn. He went at it whole-souledly and Steve had to curb his enthusiasm. "Once a minute will do, Perry," he said. "You sound like a locomotive scaring a ...
— The Adventure Club Afloat • Ralph Henry Barbour

... have deserted a Strafford as did Mary's grandson. She drove Burghley and Walsingham almost to despair by her caprices; but if she overrode their judgment, it was not to displace them for other advisers more congenial to her mood, but to take affairs into her own hands, and manipulate them with a cool defiance of apparent probabilities, a duplicity so audacious that it passed for a kind of sincerity, which gave her successes the appearance of being due to an almost supernatural good luck. Histrionics were ...
— England Under the Tudors • Arthur D. Innes

... bought, or rather manipulated into his control, one railroad after another, amid an onslaught of bribery and glaring violations of the laws. Each new million that he seized was an additional resource by which he could bribe and manipulate; progressively his power advanced; and it became ridiculously easier to get possession of more and more property. His very name became a terror to those of lesser capital, and the mere threat of pitting his enormous wealth against competitors whom he ...
— Great Fortunes from Railroads • Gustavus Myers


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