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"dupery" Definitions
  1. the condition of being duped
  2. the act or practice of duping

14 Sentences With "dupery"

How to use dupery in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dupery" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dupery". Mastering all the usages of "dupery" from sentence examples published by news publications.

What proof is there that dupery through hope is so much worse than dupery through fear?
We prefer other explanations for political wrongdoing that will not reveal our dupery.
The whole displays a complete system of dupery, and the agents were graduated.
Further, the court said it was not substantiated that the accused had committed dupery.
And between ourselves what dupery there is in science, how it narrows our horizon!
Fleetwood's wrath with his position warned him against the dupery of any such alcove thoughts.
He attributed the dupery to a trick of imposing the idea of her virtue upon men.
His Eminence the Cardinal Savelli was angry enough at the dupery which had been practised on him.
He would surely be credited with the dupery, and he now reckoned his time for activity short.
Some of the editors continued to take his hoax essay at face value even after he had revealed his dupery.
This dupery has unfortunately frequently neutralized the reactions of those with a responsibility for legislative and moral direction in our society.
He was the second concertmaster of the Oslo Philharmonic from its beginning in 1919, and for a time he served as first concertmaster at the Christiania Theatre and National Theatre. With Ole Olsen and Edvard Grieg, he created music for Henrik Ibsen's comedy The League of Youth (premiere at the Swedish Theatre, 1901). Like Ole Olsen, Lange was a Freemason and worked as a conductor and arranger for the Freemasons Orchestra (1921–1936). In Halden he was a member of a chamber quartet together with Oscar Borg (his violin teacher in his youth), Markus Boberg, and the cellist Dupery Hamilton.
Danzig in the 17th century, a port of the Hanseatic League In 1776, Adam Smith published the paper An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. It criticized Mercantilism, and argued that economic specialization could benefit nations just as much as firms. Since the division of labour was restricted by the size of the market, he said that countries having access to larger markets would be able to divide labour more efficiently and thereby become more productive. Smith said that he considered all rationalizations of import and export controls "dupery", which hurt the trading nation as a whole for the benefit of specific industries.
In section VIII, James finally moves beyond what he considers mere preliminaries. Here James first identifies areas of belief where he holds that to believe without evidence would be unjustified: "Wherever the option between losing truth and gaining it is not momentous, we can throw the chance of gaining truth away, and at any rate save ourselves from any chance of believing falsehood, by not making up our minds at all till objective evidence has come. In scientific questions, this is almost always the case ... The questions here are always trivial options, the hypotheses are hardly living (at any rate not living for us spectators), the choice between believing truth or falsehood is seldom forced." James concludes this section by asking us to agree "that wherever there is no forced option, the dispassionately judicial intellect with no pet hypothesis, saving us, as it does from dupery at any rate, ought to be our ideal".

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