charlatan-
(Italian, "chatter, prattle" > French: deceive, deceiver; swindle, swindler; fraud, quack, chiseler)
A charlatan, who was a salesman in a jewelry store, tried to convince Jane that she could buy a diamond ring for much less than a cheap silver ring.
Synonyms: fake, fraud, deceiver, quack, impostor/imposter, cheat, swindler, trickster.
2. Etymology: from Italian ciarlatano, "babbler, idle talker"; from ciariare, "to babble, to patter"; an imitation of the sounds of empty talking.Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.
"A charlatan is a quack who hopes others don't know that he doesn't know what he pretends to know."
The financial advisor used a significant number of charlatanisms to get people to make useless investments that made him wealthy but caused many to lose great amounts of money.
A popular news anchorman has been suspended, or temporarily inactivated from his position, for making charlatanistic claims about the dangers he supposedly experienced while he was going to obtain the news and other possible charlatanistic statements that he might have made over the previous years.
Another example of a charlatanry was experienced by a traveler who was pulling his suitcase and a small bag with his credit card, etc. under a bridge in New York. Two men approached him and one of them distracted the foreign visitor by saying that there were bird droppings on the back of his jacket and while the man was supposedly brushing the bird feces off, the other man grabbed the personal bag and both of them ran off before the victim could respond to the charlatanry that took place.