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fraudé

Fraudé is a term primarily found in French-language contexts, where it functions as the past participle of the verb frauder, meaning to defraud or deceive. As an adjective, fraudé can describe something that has been defrauded or is related to deceit. In practice, it is used to indicate that fraud has occurred or that a document, transaction, or action has been manipulated through deceit. The form fraudé agrees with gender and number (fraudé, fraudée, fraudés, fraudées).

In legal and administrative language, fraudé may appear in phrases such as a fraudulent document or a

Etymology traces fraudé to the verb frauder, which derives from the Latin fraus, meaning deceit or fraud.

See also: fraude, frauder, defraud, fraudster, fraudulence.

defrauded
account,
though
la
fraude
(fraud)
is
the
more
common
noun
for
the
wrongdoing
and
frauder
the
corresponding
verb.
The
term
is
more
often
encountered
in
written
French
than
in
everyday
speech,
and
writers
typically
prefer
the
noun
fraud
or
the
verb
frauder
to
express
the
concept
of
deceit
or
financial
wrongdoing.
As
with
many
past
participles
in
French,
fraudé
can
function
attributively
when
it
directly
modifies
a
noun.
The
relationship
mirrors
cognate
terms
in
related
Romance
languages,
such
as
fraude
in
French,
fraude
in
Spanish,
or
fraude
in
Portuguese,
all
rooted
in
the
same
Latin
source.