Although quickly buried by the media, they paint a graphic picture of fraud, duplicity and hypocrisy. |
|
It raised fundamental policy questions and confirmed antiwar critics' charges of high-level deception and duplicity. |
|
At the same time, the artist alludes to the real world, having it out with hypocrisy and duplicity. |
|
There will be no more duplicity, crookedness, and desire for name, fame, and prestige. |
|
Victorian morality and its inherent contradictions wouldn't have blinked at the pair's duplicity. |
|
I have been accused of perfidy, malingering, duplicity, charlatanism and forty other words that I don't know the meaning of. |
|
The word connotes secrecy and duplicity, but the perpetrators have been completely up front and honest about their goals and about their motives. |
|
Children in such families are quick to be inoculated with the germ of duplicity. |
|
A nightwatchman later overheard him bragging about his duplicity and arrested him. |
|
The only thing that has changed is the capacity of the clerical culture to sustain the duplicity. |
|
After the war there was a Dutch parliamentary commission of investigation, but it discovered neither treachery nor duplicity. |
|
His affability and lack of duplicity did not set him in good stead for his dealings with the sleazier side of 1980s politics. |
|
Until then, it will look like just so much smoke and mirrors from the old order of duplicity and double standards. |
|
But given his deceit on foreign policy and duplicity on the nuclear issue, I think we have good reason to be suspicious. |
|
And then, in light of the company's history of serial duplicity and ham-fisted sponsoring subterfuge, they assume it must be rubbish. |
|
She claimed to be going off to invigilate an exam for a friend, but I sensed duplicity in the air. |
|
So the world of Dali is undoubtedly one of duplicity, tricks, mysteries and illusions. |
|
Lying, cheating, deception and duplicity only matter when you lose, for the winners rewrite history. |
|
They seem to have got some grim kick out out of their cunning, duplicity, guile and secrecy. |
|
Shara saw Deidre looking at her strangely, as if measuring her words for duplicity. |
|
|
He only discovered her duplicity when he found a marriage certificate in her handbag. |
|
He is particularly scathing about one member whom he characterises as callous, spineless and non-confrontational to the point of duplicity. |
|
She gave him a pointed look, alerting him that she was aware of his duplicity. |
|
The white master, unable to detect the duplicity of slaves' language, became its victim. |
|
The samples were kept for 10 mins to ensure the attainment of thermal equilibrium, confirmed by the constancy of the duplicity. |
|
Indulge at length your preoccupation with lying, bullying, malice, chicanery, duplicity and revenge. |
|
In fact, it seems that the only people privy to the scheming duplicity of most of the contestants are the camera operators. |
|
Because it involves duplicity and double-dealing, nobody emerges with clean hands. |
|
He said the biggest obstacle to a Yes vote was the Government, whose track record of deceit, and duplicity had now been shamefully exposed. |
|
I must have looked desperate and downtrodden because she agreed to be party to the duplicity. |
|
When her survey group becomes lost inside the cave, the author uses the experience to propel questions of the duplicity of maps and the ambiguities of human perception. |
|
Soon, helped by his younger brother and armed with only his own duplicity, acumen and dumb luck, Yuri has become a highly successful international gunrunner. |
|
But elsewhere, the PM was too bold to take the prize for political duplicity. |
|
Investigative journalists maintain a constant patrol for evidence of venality, duplicity, extravagance, or simple human weakness. |
|
Apostasy by definition is duplicity and falseness, a withdrawal and defection from the Gospel and true godliness. |
|
Time and again in negotiations over Iran's nuclear programme, America and its allies assumed Iranian duplicity and insincerity. |
|
That kind of chicanery, duplicity and patronage system is unprecedented in the country under this administration. |
|
These shocking cases of duplicity have deprived many innocent Canadians of hard-earned savings, and in truly awful cases, of retirement funds. |
|
Rather, we must understand it as a distribution of duties and not as duplicity. |
|
It succeeded in honouring its duty to accommodate a disabled employee while at the same time holding the employee accountable for her duplicity. |
|
|
To justify this life of duplicity some argue that many of the rituals, charms and even gods of their own culture are not really evil. |
|
Eventually they will become so distracted, and their relationships will be so corroded by duplicity and miscommunication, that they will simply give up and die out. |
|
To say that this issue is too big for the people is to portray a myth, to portray a sham, to engage in an exercise in deceit, and to engage in an exercise in duplicity. |
|
To promote and protect their interest, they used coercion, bribery and nepotism as state policy and created a culture of opportunism, deceit, duplicity, loot and plunder. |
|
Meanwhile in the aftermath of the war, the evidence of deception and duplicity that we experienced before and during the war has continued at pace. |
|
I know I am running the risk of DC finding out, and then being accused of duplicity, but at the moment I don't think she'd understand my reasons or my purpose. |
|
But hypocrisy, duplicity and deception are recognized skills of diplomacy. |
|
This concurrence of disparate attitudes toward him creates an ambiguous point of view and indicates a duplicity, if not a multiplicity, of authorship. |
|
Is behind-the-scenes duplicity, cloaked in coming-of-age business dilemma, the new norm for major-label moves? |
|
But for a man who delighted in exposing hypocrisies, his relationship to Communism was riddled with duplicity. |
|
His spineless duplicity confirms that the good guy is actually pretty much a louse. |
|
Yes, of course, it is threaded through with hypocrisy and outright duplicity. |
|
He immediately refers back to the episode he had witnessed, using it as his main example of the need to remain constantly on one's guard against princely duplicity. |
|
The Government was caught out and exposed, but time and time again we are seeing this Government exercising duplicity in the messages it delivers to New Zealanders. |
|
However, I cannot refrain from saying openly that I truly deplore the duplicity shown by the parliamentary secretary who spoke on behalf of the government in this debate tonight. |
|
Empress Elizabeth of Russia was outraged at the duplicity of Britain's position. |
|
The theological and exegetic rationales for such duplicity are by now threadbare and rotting. |
|
But the uncertainties of the present, in its duplicity and constant revision and reinter pretation, lead to equal uncertainties about the past. |
|
Daphnis criticizes not only the duplicity of women but also the self-induced eroticism of lachrymosity. |
|
He wasn't able to drive it and remember his lines at the same time, and after an hour of lurching stops and grinding gears he had to admit his duplicity. |
|
|
His infantile character, duplicity, cold-heartedness, and self-dealing greed are evident not merely to the majority of the poll-answering electorate but, sooner or later, to those who make the decision to work at his side. |
|
It even escalates the discomfort and duplicity by magnitudes. |
|
Decades of mistrust and duplicity on both sides are coming to the surface. |
|
As a result, duplicity and secretness became essential components of their identity. |
|
Few Tunisians were surprised at this French duplicity. |
|
So with that much deceit on a straight website, imagine the duplicity in a forum for fornicators. |
|
The contrasting emotions, the duplicity, it's all pure stagecraft, up to us to get it right and to Sean to make sure the audience gets the right view every second. |
|
Riley's sardony preserves the duplicity, the netherness, the not-me of the narcissistic identification. |
|
He reveals the core of unredressed resentment, unfulfilled desire, inescapable duplicity, unrelieved anger, unresolved doubts, unrevealed secrets, and relentless self-abnegation on which the life of a couple depends. |
|
Twelve foreshot and twelve backshot records at varying offsets were acquired for each geophone setup to achieve 24 fold duplicity. |
|
The replies were the usual ones for courtiers: mostly a mixture of flattery, hypocrisy, toadyism and even duplicity, finishing up in the goods of this world and the vanities of the age. |
|
An endless refrain of questions and answers, steeped in innuendo, follows, creating doubts and tensions that expose the duplicity of each character. |
|
Now, Lord of peace, grant us these blessings, purify us from all sin, from all duplicity, from all hypocrisy, from all evil, from all machinations and the memory of evil hidden by death. |
|
Following Mao Tse Tung's victory over the Nationalist forces in 1949, Xinjiang was brought back into the Chinese fold through a combination of political duplicity and military force. |
|
Worse, the Bolsheviks temporized and conferred the status of autonomous regions on Karabakh and Nakhichevan, enshrining the two as symbols, in Armenian eyes, of Bolshevik duplicity. |
|
Franco Narducci, president of UNAIE, pointed to the duplicity of the Italian labour market where the trade-off between rigidity and flexibility produces a discrimination among workers. |
|
Mr President, I voted against the joint motion on the European Council summit because of its duplicity over the Irish referendum and its foolish clinging to economically damaging climate-change targets. |
|
The fact that this is defended in the workers movement today is a measure of the success of democratic duplicity, directly reflecting the political strength of the capitalist order. |
|
No prizes for guessing who the Big Satan is but Iranians have always had a healthy respect for our duplicity and Britain's ability to pull strings behind the scenes. |
|