1 bluff- good-naturedly direct, blunt, or frank; heartily outspoken.
or - to make someone believe an possibility, such as in Poker
The world's top poker player used a bluff; the other players thought he had a flush when he only had a pair of 2's.
2 bluff- a cliff, headland or hill with a broad, steep face.
The base of the bridge will be on that bluff.
Rough, tough, enough.
There are some, depending on your definition of the word hill. Part of downtown Memphis over looks the river from atop a large bluff.
bluff
Depends which bluff you mean. Bluff as a steep promontory or a steep bank comes from an early Dutch word 'Blaf' meaning 'broad' . Bluff as a poker term is early American English, taken from another Dutch word, 'Bluffen' meaning to 'brag or boast'. Another Dutch word 'verbluffen' meaning to 'baffle or mislead' is also applicable.
i would probably say yes. it is a verb because someone can bluff. for example: "Charles Wellington can and will bluff a lot." i hope that answers your question. Good luck.
* bluff * brief
1680s Dutch "blaf" meaning flat or broad.
lie, fib, fool, mislead, trick, deceive
The plural form for the noun bluff is bluffs.
The dictionary definition of a word
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