From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishconnivecon‧nive /kəˈnaɪv/ verb [intransitive] 1 LET/ALLOWto not try to stop something wrong from happeningconnive at He would not be the first politician to connive at a shady business deal.2 → connive (with somebody) to do something —connivance noun [uncountable] We could not have escaped without the connivance of the guards.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
connive• Would the brother connive at it?• The problem remains of how to get the existing parliament to connive at its own demise.Origin connive (1600-1700) French conniver, from Latin connivere “to close the eyes, connive”