deception
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Pull the wool over someone's eyes
To deceive someone by misleading them or hiding the truth, making them believe something false.
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String along
To deceive someone by giving them false hope or leading them on, often to delay an unpleasant truth or to exploit their expectations.
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Sweep under the rug
To hide a problem, mistake, or an unpleasant situation, often to avoid dealing with it or to maintain appearances.
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Blowing smoke
To speak boastfully or misleadingly, often without genuine substance or intent, in order to impress or deceive someone.
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Don't pull the wool over my eyes
To deceive or mislead someone, preventing them from seeing the truth.
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Don't try to con me
This phrase is a direct warning to someone not to attempt to deceive, trick, or swindle the speaker.
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Don't try to bamboozle me
This phrase is a direct warning telling someone not to attempt to deceive, trick, or mislead the speaker.
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Don't try to fool me
A direct warning to someone that the speaker sees through their attempts at deception and will not be tricked.
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Monkey business
Mischievous, deceitful, or unauthorized behavior, often implying a lack of seriousness or integrity.
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Snow job
A snow job is an attempt to deceive, mislead, or overwhelm someone with an excessive amount of elaborate, often false or insincere, information.
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Deal from the bottom of the deck
To act unfairly or dishonestly, often through concealed methods, to gain an advantage.
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The dice are loaded
This phrase signifies that a situation is unfairly biased or rigged, making it impossible for someone to succeed fairly.
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A song and dance
An elaborate, often unnecessary explanation, excuse, or fuss, usually intended to distract, deceive, or impress.
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String someone along
To deceive someone by leading them on with false promises or intentions, often over an extended period.
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To have an ace up your sleeve
To possess a secret advantage, plan, or resource that can be revealed at a crucial moment.
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To bluff your way through
To succeed in a situation by pretending to have more skill, knowledge, or confidence than one actually possesses.
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Put on an act
To feign an emotion or behavior, or to behave in a way that is not genuine, often to deceive or impress others.
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From whole cloth
To create something entirely new and fictional, without any pre-existing basis or truth.
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Have something up one's sleeve
To possess a secret plan, advantage, or resource kept hidden for future use.
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To cloak one's intentions
To deliberately conceal one's true plans or motives from others.
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Window dressing
Making something appear more attractive or impressive than it actually is, often to deceive or create a positive but misleading impression.
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Under the cloak of
To do something secretly or surreptitiously, often using a pretense to hide the true nature of an action.
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Stitch someone up
To falsely incriminate someone or to trick them into a difficult and unfair situation.
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The oldest trick in the book
This phrase refers to a familiar, often simple and obvious, deceptive or manipulative tactic that has been used many times before.
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Behind someone's back
To do or say something secretly and often unfavorably about someone, without their knowledge or consent.
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Catfish
To deceive someone by creating a false online identity to engage in a romantic or personal relationship with them.
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Palm off
To deceptively sell or pass off something of inferior quality, or something unwanted, as valuable or desirable.
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Behind your back
To do or say something secretly and often negatively about someone, without their knowledge or presence.
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leading someone up the garden path
To deceive or mislead someone, often subtly or with false promises.
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taking someone for a ride
To deceive, exploit, or mislead someone, often for personal gain or malicious intent.
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leading you down the garden path
To deceive or mislead someone, often by making false promises or giving them a misleading impression.
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hidden in plain sight
Something that is difficult to find or recognize precisely because it is in an obvious or conspicuous location.
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A pack of lies
A series of completely false statements or fabrications.
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A fabricated story
A narrative or account that has been entirely invented or manufactured, not based on truth or fact.
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A trumped-up story
A trumped-up story is a false or fabricated account, often created with the intention to deceive, mislead, or wrongly incriminate someone.
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A hoax
A deceptive trick or fabrication, especially one intended to make people believe something false and often ridiculous.
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A snow job
A snow job is an act of deception, often involving flattery, exaggeration, or overwhelming someone with misleading information.
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Flimflam
Flimflam refers to deceptive or misleading talk or behavior, often used to swindle someone.
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A honey trap
A deceptive scheme in which a person is enticed into a compromising romantic or sexual situation, often for the purpose of espionage, blackmail, or other illicit gain.
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A mirage
An optical illusion, often seen in deserts, where distant objects appear displaced or reflected, or a pool of water seems to exist where there is none, symbolizing something desired but unattainable or unreal.
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Sweet poison
Something that initially seems attractive or beneficial but ultimately proves harmful or destructive.
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A sugar-coated pill
Something unpleasant, difficult, or undesirable that is made to seem more attractive or acceptable.
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Smoke and mirrors
Deceptive actions or elaborate distractions used to obscure the truth or create a false, often impressive, impression.
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Greek gift
A Greek gift is a seemingly generous offering that ultimately brings harm or trouble to the recipient.
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Blow smoke
To exaggerate, mislead, or speak in a way that is intentionally vague or insincere, often to impress or deceive.
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The game is up
The secret plan or deception has been discovered and can no longer continue.
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Sleight of hand
Sleight of hand refers to the skillful use of one's hands to perform tricks or create illusions, often to deceive an audience or an unsuspecting person.
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A facade
A misleading outward appearance or a superficial show, often intended to conceal a less pleasant or authentic reality.
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Misdirection
The act of guiding someone's attention away from an important object or fact, often to conceal a trick or an underlying purpose.
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An illusion
Something that appears to be real or true but is in fact false, misleading, or a product of imagination.
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Things are not always what they seem
Appearances can be misleading, and the true nature of a situation or person may differ from initial impressions.
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He's just playing a part
This phrase describes someone who is not being genuine, but is instead deliberately behaving in a certain way, often to deceive or impress others, much like an actor in a play.
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An ulterior motive
A secret, often self-serving reason for doing something, hidden from others.
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Play someone for a fool
To intentionally deceive or manipulate someone, treating them as if they are unintelligent or easily fooled.
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Disingenuous praise
Praise that is insincere or given with an ulterior motive, often to flatter or manipulate someone.