Lies
lie 1
L0155100 (lī)lie 2
L0155100 (lī)These verbs mean to evade or depart from the truth: a witness who lied under oath; didn't equivocate about her real purpose; fibbed to escape being scolded; didn't prevaricate but answered honestly.
Lies/Liars
See Also: DISHONESTY
- Falsehood, like poison, will generally be rejected when administered alone; but when blended with wholesome ingredients, may be swallowed unperceived —Richard Whately
- Falsehood, like the dry rot, flourishes the more in proportion as air and light are excluded —Richard Whately
- A great lie is like a great fish on dry land; it may fret and fling, and make a frightful bother, but it cannot hurt you. You have only to keep still and it will die of itself —George Crabbe
- (He’s as) honest as the cat when the meat’s out of reach —H. G. Bohn’s Handbook of Proverbs
- Lie as fast as a dog can lick a dish —John Ray’s Proverbs
- Lied as often and as badly as politicians —James Crumley
- Lied like a fish —John Dos Passos
- Lied like an Arab —Ana’s Nin
- Lied like a rug —Anon
In his novel, private I Jimmy Sangster extends this with “Lying like a cheap carpet.”
- The lie fell as easily from his lips as a windfall apple —Donald Seaman
- A lie is like a snowball; the longer it is rolled, the larger it is —Martin Luther
- Lie like a trooper —American colloquialism, attributed to New England
- Lie like fish —Saul Bellow
- Lies are as communicative as fleas —Walter Savage Landor
- Lies as fast as a dog trots —John Ray’s Proverbs
- Lies as fast as a horse can trot —Danish proverb
The comparison tends to change with use “As fast as a dog can trot” being one of the most frequently heard variants.
- Lies … buzz about the heads of some people, like flies about a horse’s ears in summer —Jonathan Swift
- Lies fall like flaxen thread from the skies —John Ashbery
- Lies flew out of my mouth like moths —Susan Fromberg Schaeffer
- Lies like a car-dealer —William Mcllvanney
- Lying like a book —Bertold Brecht
- Lying like an accountant at an audit —A. E. Maxwell
- Lying like stink —Angus Wilson
- Lying to someone is like blindfolding him: you cannot see the other’s eyes to see how he sees you and so you do not know how it stands with yourself —Walker Percy
- The nimble lie is like the second-hand upon a clock; we see it fly, while the hour-hand of truth seems to stand still, and yet it moves unseen, and wins at last, for the clock will not strike till it has reached the goal —Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
- (Our) one white lie sits like a little ghost (here on the threshold of our enterprise) —Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- The prevaricator is like an idolater —Eleazar
- The telling of a falsehood is like the cut of a sabre; for though the wound may heal, the scar of it will remain —Sadi
- To tell a falsehood is like the cut of a sabre; for though the wound may heal, the scar of it will remain —Sadi
- When the lie was said it had the effect of leaving her breathless, as if she had just crowned a steep rise —Nadine Gordimer