0 present participle of dupe
1 to deceive someone, usually by making that person do something that they did not intend to do:
The relationship between magnetiser and subject remained therefore ambivalent: how could it be proved that the subject was not really duping the magnetiser?
The possibility of duping people should never be an acceptable means of administration and it could have damaging consequences.
This is a case of consumers’ being sold poor and old-fashioned technology by companies that are at present duping them.
We cannot allow ourselves to become notorious for duping citizens in this way.
Doorstep quacks are duping housewives into buying spectacles for much more than they are worth.
It is absurd to say that you should use a tax as a means of duping the people.
He is very largely duping a lot of simple people.
This can include all game data or be limited to specific items, characters, or other means determined to be involved in the duping.