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Dissembling   /dɪsˈɛmblɪŋ/   Listen
Dissembling

noun
1.
Pretending with intention to deceive.  Synonyms: feigning, pretence, pretense.
2.
The act of deceiving.  Synonyms: deceit, deception, dissimulation.



Dissemble

verb
(past & past part. dissembled; pres. part. dissembling)
1.
Make believe with the intent to deceive.  Synonyms: affect, feign, pretend, sham.  "He shammed a headache"
2.
Hide under a false appearance.  Synonyms: cloak, mask.
3.
Behave unnaturally or affectedly.  Synonyms: act, pretend.



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"Dissembling" Quotes from Famous Books



... affectation of thoughtfulness. Trent watched him curiously. He knew quite well that his partner was dissembling, but he scarcely saw to what end. Monty's eyes, moving round the grass-bound hut, stopped at Trent's knapsack which hung from the central pole. ...
— A Millionaire of Yesterday • E. Phillips Oppenheim

... you ask what has been the turn of his common conversation? Instead of being pious, useful, benevolent, candid, and sincere, it has at one time been proud and passionate, at another vain and flourishing, at another slanderous and revengeful; now again, it has been selfish, crafty, and dissembling, often also daringly impious and profane, and not seldom exceedingly polluting and impure. Do you ask what have been the sinful deeds he has done? O what a dreadful variety has there been in them! At one time he has been trying ...
— Stories for the Young - Or, Cheap Repository Tracts: Entertaining, Moral, and Religious. Vol. VI. • Hannah More

... hardly dissembling her aversion to the "continental system," and openly refusing to acknowledge Joseph as King of Spain, would avail herself of the insurrection of that country, necessarily followed by the march of a great French army across the Pyrenees, as affording a favourable ...
— The History of Napoleon Buonaparte • John Gibson Lockhart

... negotiations: "The queen, to protract the time till supplies of men and other necessary provisions arrived, and to abate the fervor of the enemy, being constrained to have recourse to her wonted arts, excellently dissembling those so ...
— History of the Rise of the Huguenots - Volume 2 • Henry Baird

... what I might and ought to be. I was like a grasshopper before, drunk with dew, and then sobered by a plunge into a clear, cool spring. Besides, I have thought more about your advice in regard to the lady, you dissembling old rascal! For you know that in such matters you never mean what you say; and when you counsel me to fall in love with a coquette, you only wish me to be warned in time and make good my escape. If it were light enough, I should see that grizzly moustache of yours curl ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 3, Issue 15, January, 1859 • Various


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