When you use different personae to misrepresent yourself
You could say It was hard to deceive the teacher about that lie.
Do not deceive me, unless you want respect and honesty in return.
Jasper and Rosalie pretend to be twins - adopted by the Carlisle & Esme. In the novel, they look enough alike and close enough in age to use the twin story as part of their cover story.
Guilecraft: shrewdness as demonstrated by being skilled in deceptioncraftiness: the quality of being craftytrickery: the use of tricks to deceive someone
A narrative is a story that you write or tell to someone
It is not "onomonopiea" It's "onomatopoeia". We use it when we want to compare someone or something with another thing such as "It was as silent as a graveyard" or "The two twins are alike as two peas".
That depends on the what the story is about, the style, the mood, and the objective. Do you want to teach something, shock someone, make someone laugh, or make the reader think?
Babies and young children are allowed on camera a certain number of minutes in a scence/story so they use twins so the baby looks the same, they meet the needs of the law, and they can keep filming using a child.
Are you trying to say deceive? If so, then it depends on the song.
Everyone knew the congressman was up to some chicanery in his actions during the party.
we are so used to dissembling with others that in time we come to deceive and dissemble with ourselves