Something intended to deceive; deliberate trickery intended to gain an advantage.
The act or practice of deceiving.
1Eventually he came to the conclusion that the Republic was mere dupery.
2The whole displays a complete system of dupery, and the agents were graduated.
3What if he is not an easy prey to dupery?
4Egoist agony wrung the outcry from him that dupery is a more blessed condition.
5And between ourselves what dupery there is in science, how it narrows our horizon!
6People like to be plundered in company; dupery then grows into the spirit of party.
7Fleetwood's wrath with his position warned him against the dupery of any such alcove thoughts.
8What dupery his long life of labour had been!
9He attributed the dupery to a trick of imposing the idea of her virtue upon men.
10Cunning, jealousy, perfidy, ingratitude, dupery were the instruments with which he would fashion out a State.
11Her reign, on the contrary, was only one continual intrigue; and that of the King a perpetual dupery.
12But that is not justice, it is dupery-duperythat has brought the world nothing but suffering for centuries past.
13But the fact that they were not due to any external dupery didn't make them a bit pleasanter to see.
14Dupery of Opera undertakers-232
15Eventually he came to the conclusion that the Republic was mere dupery.
16The whole displays a complete system of dupery, and the agents were graduated.