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The phrase "duped you" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It means to deceive or trick someone into believing something that is not true. Example: I can't believe she duped you into giving her all your money.
Exact(8)
In your case – and in that of others who were also duped – you bought shares in Blackhawk Mines and a fixed-rate bond in Euro Marine Energy.
At least, it is when you have to phone your kids up to find out where they put those damned silly glasses after they finished watching Avatar, which they'd duped you into buying on Sky Box Office.
Leaving might sound extreme, but if you really feel your employer has duped you, I wonder if you are going to be able to get over that and swallow your mistrust.
If, for example, the audience have an inchoate sense of outrage about what their government is up to, the play can say to them: "Yes, you've been duped, you've been had, you were right all along to feel that you've been lied to".
Nonliteral imagery duped you into focusing on the one thing that you felt so damn woke about.
Non-literal imagery duped you into focusing on the one thing that you felt so damn woke about.
Similar(50)
Did it dupe you?
"How could you have let them dupe you?
Homeland Defense helicopters are painted red, white and blue; someone may be trying to dupe you.
This revelation raises a troubling but simultaneously intriguing question – can the police authorize someone to dupe you into sex?
It's an under-appreciated gem in our national cultural identity – but they'll try to dupe you into thinking the Collingwood rehearsal space is simply a fun factory.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com