Definition
Plural of duper; people who trick, deceive, or fool others.
Etymology
From dupe (to trick) with the agent suffix -er (one who does), plus plural -s. The root dupe comes from French, possibly from duppe, a hooded pigeon seen as silly.
Kelly Says
Interestingly, the word dupe may come from the hooded pigeon (duppe), which was seen as a foolish bird—so calling someone a dupe literally means calling them as silly as a hooded pigeon!
Translations
ARالعربية
مُحتالون
mu-ḥiṭā-lun
CACatalà
enganyadors
en-ga-na-do-rs
CSČeština
podvodníci
po-do-v-ni-ci
DADansk
bedrager
be-dra-ger
DEDeutsch
Betrüger
bet-rü-ger
ELΕλληνικά
απατεώνες
a-pa-te-o-nes
ESEspañol
estafadores
es-ta-fo-ra-dos
FAفارسی
دروغگو
do-rogh-goo
FISuomi
petokirjoittajat
pe-to-ki-roi-t-ta-jat
FRFrançais
arnaqueurs
ar-na-k-e
HAHA
masu gwagwarawa
ma-su gwa-gwa-ra-wa
HIहिन्दी
धोखेबाज
dho-khe-ba-aj
HUMagyar
megcsalók
meg-cha-lok
IDBahasa Indonesia
penipu
pe-ni-pu
ITItaliano
imbroglioni
im-bro-gli-o-ni
MRMR
धोकादायक
dho-ka-da-yak
MSBahasa Melayu
penipu
pe-ni-pu
NLNederlands
oplichters
op-li-ch-ters
NONorsk
bedrager
be-dra-ger
PLPolski
oszustów
osz-ust-ow
PTPortuguês
enganadores
en-ga-na-do-res
RORomână
escroci
es-kro-ci
RUРусский
обманщики
ob-man-shchi-ki
SVSvenska
bedragare
be-dra-ga-re
SWKiswahili
walema
wa-le-ma
TAதமிழ்
குடும்பம்
ku-dum-bam
TLTL
mga manloloko
mga man-lo-lo-ko
TRTürkçe
dolandırıcılar
do-lan-dir-i-ci-lar
UKУкраїнська
обманщики
ob-man-shchi-ki
VITiếng Việt
lừa đảo
lừa đảo