Dictionary
to deception
noun
An instance of actions and/or schemes fabricated to mislead and/or delude someone into errantly believing a lie or inaccuracy.
Exact(59)
Some of the characters are driven to deception and murder.
A quarter of a century later, Chinese leaders remain almost as prone to deception by underlings.
And paradoxically, all that corrosive suspicion makes us arguably more, rather than less, vulnerable to deception.
Three decades of research have shown that nonverbal signals, so prized by the Reid trainers, bear no relation to deception.
The Greek people must remount their bicycle of democracy by demanding an end to deception and corruption.
That is because it measures the brain's actual response to deception, rather than the physiological concomitants of that response.
He reported that he found that many co-workers were subjected to deception, systematic underpayment, and appalling living conditions.
The problem is that the promise of genuine "unique information" comes with the reality of vulnerability to deception.
Under the sway of their opium habits, both men resorted to deception and the deflection of responsibility.
That title leads to deception of parents with a child diagnosed with autism and inaccurate public perceptions about the disorder.
Strauss's idea of hidden meaning, Shulsky and Schmitt added, "alerts one to the possibility that political life may be closely linked to deception.
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