give the lie to

Related to give the lie to: lie in wait, lie low, lie around, relative to, lying low

give the lie to (something)

To refute or counter something. Her somber demeanor gave the lie to her statement that she was doing great.
See also: give, lie
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

give the lie to something

Fig. to show that something is a lie. The evidence gives the lie to your testimony. Your own admission of your part in the conspiracy gives the lie to your earlier testimony.
See also: give, lie
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

give the lie to

Show to be false, refute, as in His black eye gave the lie to his contention that he hadn't been fighting. [First half of 1500s]
See also: give, lie
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

give the lie to

1. To show to be inaccurate or untrue.
2. To accuse of lying.
See also: give, lie
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

give the lie to, to

To refute, to prove false; also, to accuse of lying. This expression dates from the sixteenth century. Sir Walter Raleigh used it in his poem “The Lie,” in which he tells his soul to survive his body: “Go, since I needs must die, and give the world the lie.” It is less often heard today.
See also: give, lie
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • give the lie to (something)
  • give the lie to something
  • a lie has no legs
  • lie like a rug
  • give the lie to, to
  • lie through (one's) teeth
  • lie through one's teeth
  • lie through teeth
  • lie through your teeth
  • be forsworn
References in periodicals archive
Since it is a social force founded on odious falsehood of choice without consequence, it is perhaps not so surprising that its latest manifestations give the lie to the hoopla of 1999 as the end of the 20th-century, and the threshold of a bright new millennium.
Such efforts give the lie to the notion that feminism is "anti-family."
THE Pride of Britain awards give the lie to the notion that we are living in a broken society.
``Mr Scappaticci appears here today to give the lie to continuing media speculation as to his whereabouts.
These facts give the lie to the unfounded claim that "incomers" are diluting the language.
Several recent works pile faux upon faux, mimicking trompe l'oeil conventions only to give the lie to them the next moment.
These premises give the lie to all the banalities about abstract interracialism - from teaching the world to sing in perfect harmony to cynical appropriations of Rodney King's lament - and the mindless noodling about individual prejudice.
Sneaky programme workers changed the time on the clock in the studio, but the hands on Martin's watch clearly give the lie to the pretence that it was a live show.
They give the lie to Calder's supposed coyness and humor.
Tickets costing pounds 400 per head give the lie to Cameron's claim of an "inclusive" party when the Old Etonian still prefers to rub shoulders with well-heeled cronies.
The partial, minority culture emphasizes the internal differentiations, the "foreign bodies," in the midst of the nation--the interstices of its uneven and unequal devlopment, which give the lie to its self-containedness.
He said: "Mr Scappaticci appears to give the lie to continuing media speculation as to his whereabouts.