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se introducen y explican)
"Liar, liar,
pants on fire!"
Children all over the United States know this simple rhyme. They say it
when someone gets caught in a lie. In other words, when someone gets
busted for lying.
The word “lie” comes from Old English through even older German. A lie
is an untruth. It is intentional and usually has consequences.
But not all lies are created equal.
People often use white lies to prevent hurting the feelings of others or
to save themselves trouble. For example, let’s say you are eating dinner
at your boss’s house and the food is really bad. When your boss asks you,
“How do you like the meatloaf? It’s an old family recipe,” it is a good
idea to say you love it.
White lie to the rescue!
Parents and other adults are known to tell white lies to children. Some
white lies -- such as lying about Santa Claus -- are part of a tradition
and are meant for fun.
Some white lies are to protect children. For example, when a child asks
about a person who has died, adults may say the dead person is simply
sleeping.
These lies are meant to help, not hurt. But they are still, technically,
lies.
Even adults may sometime prefer to hear a lie than a truth that is too
difficult to face. In the song “Tell Me Lies,” by the rock group
Fleetwood Mac, a woman is asking for lies -- sweet little lies.
Tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies.
(Tell me lies, tell me, tell me lies)
Oh, no, no you can't disguise.
(You can't disguise, no you can't disguise)
Tell me lies, tell me sweet little lies
Another kind of relatively harmless lie is called a fib. It is a little,
unimportant lie. Fibbers who fib are usually not out to hurt anyone.
Sometimes people simply make things up. Other times they stretch the
truth, or exaggerate. In other words, they add details to the truth to
make a story better.
Bending the truth is also not a severe lie. If you bend the truth, you
take the truth and change it very slightly.
A half-truth is trickier. It could be like the name says – a statement
that is half true and half false. Or it could be a statement that is
completely true but shows only one part of the real story. Half-truths
are meant to deceive or to avoid responsibility.
These examples are all clever, subtle ways of lying. They are the
opposite of outright lies. These types of lies are direct. They are also
called out-and-out, barefaced or bold-faced lies.
Many word experts agree that the original expression is "barefaced lie"
and that it began in the 1600s. At that time, "bare" meant "bold." Also
at that time in history, almost all men had facial hair. It was
considered quite bold for a man to be clean-shaven, or barefaced.
Eventually, the word for “hairless” went from “bare” to “bald,” and so
did the description for an obvious lie. So, these days you can use bold-faced,
barefaced and even bald-faced to mean a lie that is obvious. They all
mean that there is no mistake or making excuses. This person is lying!
Barefaced liars lie easily and often. They lie through their teeth, we
like to say.
The group word for lies is pack. Someone who tells a pack of lies tells
one lie after another.
There are packs of lies and there are webs of lies. This expression may
have come from a line of Scottish poetry:
“Oh what a tangled web we weave, when first we practice to deceive.”
To be tangled in a web of one’s own lies … is no place to be.
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