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deception

1 of 1noun
/dɪ.ˈsɛp.ʃən/
Forms:deceptions
1

a trick, illusion, or feat that appears magical or impossible to naïve observers

  • Some historical feats were explained as deception by skeptics.
  • Early stage illusions were considered acts of deception.
  • The illusionist amazed the crowd with a clever deception.
  • The child believed the trick was real, unaware of the deception.
  • Sleight-of-hand relies entirely on deception.
2

the action of intentionally making a person believe something that is untrue

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  • The magician's performance relied on clever deception to create illusions.
  • Deception in advertising can mislead consumers into purchasing products based on false claims.
  • The spy used deception to infiltrate the enemy's ranks and gather intelligence.
  • Detectives uncovered a web of deception surrounding the high-profile robbery case.
  • Trust is easily broken when relationships are built on lies and deception.