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The phrase 'cheat of' is not a correct or usable phrase in written English.
If you mean 'cheating on', you can use that phrase in a sentence such as: He was caught cheating on his wife.
Exact(14)
That's our small cheat, of course.
"CHEAT!" Of all the accusations that can be levelled against an athlete, this is the most damaging.
This populist ideal is embodied in a form of television that reveals the overformatted cheat of so-called reality TV.
It was a hit, however, as was the cheat of a happy ending tacked onto "Alice Adams".
More familiar departures from reality were exemplified in The Cheat of Words by Steve McCaffery, who exposed the truth of politics through the lies politicians tell.
They could cheat, of course, and say a 747 weighs between one pound and one billion pounds, but most people do the opposite, reporting ranges that betray their overconfidence.
Similar(44)
Do not cheat off of anyone.
They think you're trying to cheat out of doing something … (Female D, age 21, FG1).
The alternative is having a segment of society cheated out of productive jobs and lives.
They've been cheated out of nine years of fandom!
They have been cheated out of the most elementary ways of teaching themselves — and therefore cheated out of pleasure.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com