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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
dupe
I.noun
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Investigators believe Dailey was a dupe for international drug smugglers.
▪ Some portray the family as unwitting dupes of conspiracy theorists.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And wretched they were, too, the poor hungry dupes.
▪ Most of us, frankly, are witless dupes to nature when the question is a baby.
▪ Richard's other dupes seem culpably naïve, deceived by false appearances.
▪ She looked at them, and saw dupes.
▪ They further felt that Scott and Trist had been the gullible dupes of Santa Anna.
▪ You poor dupe, she told herself.
II.verb
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The perpetrators of the hoax managed to dupe respectable journalists into printing their story.
▪ The spies duped government and military officials alike.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And not only that, she had compounded her stupidity by allowing herself to be duped by Leo.
▪ At least with her young, keen eyes she would have seen that he was being duped by his own nephew.
▪ If I think the reason for moral thought and action is to realise intrinsically worthwhile states, I have been duped.
▪ Sure, they were duped and deluded.
▪ The passion that wakened in me was anger, for I knew then that she had duped me.
▪ They had duped her and looted her of her sincerity.
▪ Were these held in reserve in case I wouldn't be duped?
▪ Women dieters, she realized, had been duped.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Dupe

Dupe \Dupe\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Duped (d[=u]pt); p. pr. & vb. n. Duping.] [Cf. F. duper, fr. dupe. See Dupe, n.] To deceive; to trick; to mislead by imposing on one's credulity; to gull; as, dupe one by flattery.

Ne'er have I duped him with base counterfeits. -- Coleridge.

Dupe

Dupe \Dupe\ (d[=u]p), n. [F., prob. from Prov. F. dupe, dube; of unknown origin; equiv. to F. huppe hoopoe, a foolish bird, easily caught. Cf. Armor. houp['e]rik hoopoe, a man easily deceived. Cf. also Gull, Booby.] One who has been deceived or who is easily deceived; a gull; as, the dupe of a schemer.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
dupe

1680s, from French dupe "deceived person," from Middle French duppe (early 15c.), thieves' jargon, perhaps from phrase de huppe "of the hoopoe," an extravagantly crested and reputedly stupid bird.

dupe

1704, from dupe (n.). Related: Duped; duping.

Wiktionary
dupe

Etymology 1 n. A person who has been deceived. vb. To swindle, deceive, or trick. Etymology 2

n. 1 (context photography English) A duplicate of a photographic image. 2 (context restaurant industry English) A duplicate of an order receipt printed for kitchen staff. 3 (context informal English) A duplicate. vb. (context transitive English) To duplicate.

WordNet
dupe

v. fool or hoax; "The immigrant was duped because he trusted everyone"; "You can't fool me!" [syn: gull, slang, befool, cod, fool, put on, take in, put one over, put one across]

dupe

n. a person who is tricked or swindled [syn: victim]

Wikipedia
Dupe

Dupe may refer to:

  • Duping (gaming), practice of exploiting a bug in a video game to illegitimately create duplicates of unique items or currency
  • The Dupes, a 1973 Syrian film
  • DuPage Theatre and DuPage Shoppes
  • Maxime Dupé (born 1993), French footballer
  • Tony Dupe, Australian music producer and musician
  • a organism targeted by mimicry
  • a duplicated warez release, see Topsite (warez)

Usage examples of "dupe".

The name of his partially duped accomplice and abettor in this last marvelous assault, is no other than PHILIP LYNCH, Editor and Proprietor of the Gold Hill News.

The purpose of those killings could only have been to dupe whoever was on the receiving end of those subconscious television messages into believing that this Abraxas character is some sort of Lone Ranger, spreading good wherever he goes.

I confess that I have not yet repented on his account, for Capitani thought he had duped me in accepting it as security for the amount he gave me, and the count, his father, valued it until his death as more precious than the finest diamond in the world.

The magistrate was acquainted with the girl, and the mother laughed at having duped me so easily.

They will verify the truth of the oracle immediately, and when it is found that the famous diamond is but glittering paste the company will adore my father, for it will feel that but for him it would have been covered with shame, by avowing itself the dupe of a sharper.

It did not cost me much to get wind of the adventurer, but I felt angry that he had had the impudence to try and dupe me.

His master, on the other hand, scrutinized the murals carefully, and blessed his companions with a running commentary on the Mission of Art, replete with many citations from the ancients, the essential thrust of which was that Paul Gauphin was an arrant alphabetarian, a nugatory neophyte, a coarse catechumen, a posturing parvenu who thought to conceal his blatant ignorance of the classic methods of proportion, line, perspective and portraiture by his extravagant colorism, the which was nothing but a maneuver to dupe his patrons by passing off crudity as primitivism.

God, infallible witnesses to tell to the world that auricular confession is nothing else than a snare to the confessor and his dupes.

I am not quite fully cured as yet, I have been greatly benefited, and believe, if I had come to you before I was duped and swindled by different quacks and was more dead than alive, I would to-day be a thoroughly well man.

Certain of her power, She had laid by, in fond security, The enchanted cestus, and Sir Tannhauser, With surfeited regard, beheld her now, No fairer than the women of the earth, Whom with serenity and health he left, Duped by a lovely witch.

I beg to inform you that I am not simple enough to allow myself to be duped, and, what is worse, cheated in such a manner.

One took the north and the other the south of Europe, and both cheated and duped whenever the opportunity for doing so presented itself.

I was determined not to play any longer as a dupe, but to secure in gambling all the advantages which a prudent young man could obtain without sullying his honour.

If it had not been for that belief, the result of a cowardly fright, I would not have remained one minute where I was, and my hurried flight would no doubt have opened the eyes of my two dupes, who could not have failed to see that, far from being a magician, I was only a poltroon.

The best part of the joke is that, while I was studying him, Bavois, without knowing it, restored my mind to its original state, and I was ashamed of myself when I realized that I had been the dupe of a Jesuit who was an arrant hypocrite, in spite of the character of holiness which he assumed, and which he could play with such marvellous ability.