deceive

appearances can be deceiving

proverb Appearances do not always convey accurate information. That house sure looks beautiful on the outside, but appearances can be deceiving. What did the inspector say about the foundation? Sure, she seems nice, but appearances can be deceiving.
See also: appearance, can, deceive

deceive (someone) into (something)

To fool or trick someone into doing something. I can't believe he deceived thousands of people into buying a faulty product!
See also: deceive

deceive (someone) with (something)

To use something in particular to fool or trick someone. I can't believe you deceived thousands of people with a misrepresentation of your product!
See also: deceive

flatter to deceive

To seem better or more promising than someone or something really is. A: "I can't believe that team didn't make the playoffs after starting the season so well." B: "I guess they just flattered to deceive."
See also: deceive, flatter
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

Appearances can be deceiving.

Prov. Things can look different from the way they really are. Edward seems like a very nice boy, but appearances can be deceiving. Jane may look like she doesn't understand you, but she's really extremely bright. Appearances can be deceiving.
See also: Appearance, can, deceive

deceive someone into something

to trick someone into doing something. She deceived me into giving her my car keys. You can't deceive me into doing what I don't want to do.
See also: deceive

deceive someone with something

to cheat someone with something or with deceptive words. You cannot deceive me with your promises. You are just deceiving yourself with fancy talk.
See also: deceive
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

flatter to deceive

encourage on insufficient grounds and cause disappointment.
1913 Field Two furlongs from home Maiden Erlegh looked most dangerous, but he flattered only to deceive.
See also: deceive, flatter
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
See also:
  • appearance
  • appearances can be deceiving
  • gray
  • all cats are gray at night
  • all cats are gray by night
  • all cats are gray in the dark
  • all cats are grey in the dark
  • teach a man to fish
  • village
  • it takes a village
References in periodicals archive
Practise to Deceive is certainly an absorbing, even entertaining, read.
| Does the player exaggerate the effect of a normal contact challenge in order to deceive the referee?
Of course, then shooters can deceive goalies with false cues.
authorities deceive the people saying earlier about the salary growth in all the sectors starting 1 January 2014.
At-taqiyah has since become a formula allowing Shi'ites to deceive. After Ali ibn Abi-Taleb, his cousin and son-in-law, rebelled against the Sunni caliph and established Shi'ism and thus became the first of the Ja'fari (Twelver) Shi'ites' 12th holiest and partly "divine" imams, his followers used at-taqiyah to escape persecution at the hands of oppressive Sunni caliphs (see sbme1IraqTaqiyahJan5-09)
They define lying as "(1) an intent to deceive, (2) the use of words that are literally false, and (3) the presence of a recipient who is caused by the lie to have a misimpression of reality" (41).
Speaking to FNA, Commander of Khatom ol-Anbia Air Defense Base Brigadier General Farzad Esmayeeli said that Iran's air defense unit has already switched on a project to develop systems which can deceive enemy missiles and it will put it into the operation when necessary.
"But you need to find a time and place to deceive. No agent should be constantly deceiving."
According to the standard philosophical definition, lying is saying something that you believe to be false with the intent to deceive. However, people sometimes "go on the record" with something that they believe to be false even though they have no intent to deceive.
I WAS surprised to learn the word "fail" came, originally, from the Latin word "to deceive".
One can thus deceive others by having or making them believe that P, while knowing or at least having good grounds to believe that ~P, and deceive oneself by having or making oneself believe or convincing oneself that P, while knowing or at least having good grounds to believe that ~P.
federal court last week affirmed a ruling that Sanofi-Aventis SA intended to deceive the patent office in its dispute over generic versions of its blockbuster drug Lovenox.
Magicians use more than smoke and mirrors to deceive audiences, but their secrets are rarely revealed.
The securities fraud class action lawsuit, initiated by Ohio on behalf of all Fannie Mae shareholders, accuses the government sponsored lender of manipulating earnings to deceive investors, while the company's executives profited from inflated stock prices.