Sentence examples for sense of deception from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

His clumsy attempts to clue us in only deepened my sense of deception.

Similar(58)

The 4-year literary prizes that are supposed to give recognition to the best French novels of the 12-month have just been awarded, giving, at best, a sense of literary deception &, at worst, a couple of public scandals.

By Janet Flanner The New Yorker, December 10, 1960 P. 147 The 4-year literary prizes that are supposed to give recognition to the best French novels of the 12-month have just been awarded, giving, at best, a sense of literary deception &, at worst, a couple of public scandals.

The last thing I would wish to do is foster a sense of ill will, deception or animosity in an otherwise idyllic environment.

Tsypkin puts on the great writer's life like a bearskin, making the novelist move and dance with such persuasive force that when he slips off his heavy costume and appears before the reader at intervals in the book as a modern Soviet Jew reimagining the past, the sense of doubleness and deception is disconcerting and mysteriously moving.

"But we need to have a better way of sensing the deception of foreign leaders".

Later philosophers went even further, typically regarding dreams, if not as a source of deception in Descartes' sense, then as a source of superstitious beliefs (Hobbes 1651; Kant 1766; Schopenhauer 1847).

The terms obfuscate Facebook's business strategies in such simple language that the deception — the sense of what is being left out — is almost poetic: "Sometimes we get data from our advertising partners, customers, and other third parties that helps us (or them) deliver ads, understand online activity, and generally make Facebook better".

As guests spin and the tree lurches, all sense of direction is obscured, a deception that isn't broken by a blur of the screen.

To ten Brinke, something about the existing narrative of deception didn't quite make sense.

Phishing in its broadest sense can be defined as a scalable act of deception whereby impersonation is used by an attacker to obtain information from an individual (i.e., the target) [1].

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