I suppose you could, but that's not a very grammatically correct sentence. Maybe "Lying is always considered deceitful" but I don't think "a deceit" exists
The correct spelling is deceit. It means lying. A bad sentence because I don't need to use both words, just one OR the other. The liar was deceitful. Better sentences: He lied. He was deceitful. His deceit cost him a place on the team.
It can often mean lying or deceit or overcoming one of these things.
yes (or no) but if we are to take it the sentence is 'are you lying?' then the answer is yes or no.
I'm lying on my bed.
When I came into your apartment. Your cat was lying around.
Because it talks about partying, alcohol, and unfaithfulness to spouses. It also talks about lying and deceit.
He was lying on the ground, but he was still conscious.
I can tell you are lying to me.he is lying down in bed.
Use it in a sentence.
No, he is lying. If he were saying the truth, then, in theory, as he is a chicken, he would be lying. Then, he cannot tell the truth. So, he is lying. But, if he is lying, then all chickens say the truth, and he cannot be lying. The key lies in the word "all". He is lying that ALL chickens always lie, therefore not necessarily all chickens say the truth. It could be that some chickens always lie. The truth does not have to be the opposite. Therefore, he is lying that chickens always lie, and the truth is that "some chickens always lie".
Cheating is lying, deceiving, and deceptive.
He cannot say "I am lying." (if he always tells the truth, he's lying - if he's always lying, he's telling the truth). This is known as the Liar's Paradox.