duping delight
English
Etymology
Neologism coined by Paul Ekman in his book Telling Lies (1992).
Noun
- The pleasure of being able to manipulate someone, often made visible to others by flashing a smile at an inappropriate moment.
- 2003:
- 2011:
- 2012, Alex Stone, Fooling Houdini: Adventures in the World of Magic, →ISBN, page 276:
- Of course, this sent a tsunami of duping delight gushing through my veins.
- 2014, Timothy R. Levine, Encyclopedia of Deception, →ISBN, page 320:
- It is important to draw the distinction between duping delight and pathological lying.
- 2015, Chee Seng Leow, Saiful Amin Jalun, Maisarah Ahmad, Trapping the Cunning Fox, page 79:
- The duping delight increases when the liars have successfully deceived people with high reputation of being difficult to be fooled.
- 2014:
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