A dishonest person is a person who lies and cheats. They hang with the wrong group of people and do bad things.
You might falsely accuse them of a dishonest act.
he is a dishonest boy
"Dis" is a prefix. "Honesty" is the root word. "ly" would be a suffix, as "Dishonestly".
Jordan Baker's lies reveal that she is a dishonest person. She even cheats at golf!
Dishonest is an adjective and doesn't have a plural or singular form.
A dishonest person can be referred to as a liar, deceiver, or fraudster.
an honest person hates lies while a dishonest person hates the truth. :)
A thief or dishonest person is commonly referred to as a "criminal" or "fraudster."
A lawyer being dishonest, unheard of
It's a rather odd, stilted way of saying "This person may be dishonest". Out of context and at a guess, I'd say it's meant to emphasize the likelihood that the person in question is dishonest ("he's probably dishonest"), as opposed to the other way around ("he MAY be dishonest, but probably not").
rebal
fraudulant
a liar
A crook.
An unprincipled, untrustworthy, dishonest person
The word 'dishonest' is an adjective. You would need to use a verb before the word, though.e.g. That person was being dishonest.Here, the words 'was' and 'being' are the verbs and dishonest is describing the person.* adjectives usually describe nouns. black is an adjective, cat is a noun = black cat.dishonest person = adjective + nounAdjective + noun can come before the verb eg The dishonest man stole my wallet. (verb is stole).An adjective can be used by itself, in this kind of sentence: He is dishonest (verb = is)
The French word "rogue" describes a person who is mischievous, deceitful, or dishonest. It can also refer to someone who behaves in a rebellious or unpredictable manner.