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Zebrafish
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dishonesty
dishonest

In all your cases.

1Behaving or prone to behave in an untrustworthy, deceitful, or insincere way. ‘he was a dishonest hypocrite prepared to exploit his family’

1.1 Intended to mislead or cheat.
‘he gave the editor a dishonest account of events’
Oxford Living Dictionaries

Dishonesty does not have to mean lying. For example:

"If you're going to mention A which supports your argument, you should be honest and mention B which damns your argument."

Omission is not necessarily lying.
(You can spend your entire life following debates about this being true or not)
TheRelates to telling "the truth", "the whole truth", "and nothing but the truth".
And also: "Why didn't you admit that?" "You never asked me about it."

The selective publishing of research results also falls into category of omission.

Creating possibility for ambiguity in signage, writing, or speech for one's own gain is not necessarily lying, but is dishonest if intentional.

dishonesty
dishonest

In all your cases.

1Behaving or prone to behave in an untrustworthy, deceitful, or insincere way. ‘he was a dishonest hypocrite prepared to exploit his family’

1.1 Intended to mislead or cheat.
‘he gave the editor a dishonest account of events’
Oxford Living Dictionaries

Dishonesty does not have to mean lying. For example:

"If you're going to mention A which supports your argument, you should be honest and mention B which damns your argument."

Omission is not necessarily lying
The selective publishing of research results also falls into category of omission.

Creating possibility for ambiguity in signage, writing, or speech for one's own gain is not necessarily lying, but is dishonest if intentional.

dishonesty
dishonest

In all your cases.

1Behaving or prone to behave in an untrustworthy, deceitful, or insincere way. ‘he was a dishonest hypocrite prepared to exploit his family’

1.1 Intended to mislead or cheat.
‘he gave the editor a dishonest account of events’
Oxford Living Dictionaries

Dishonesty does not have to mean lying. For example:

"If you're going to mention A which supports your argument, you should be honest and mention B which damns your argument."

Omission is not necessarily lying.
(You can spend your entire life following debates about this being true or not)
Relates to telling "the truth", "the whole truth", "and nothing but the truth".
And also: "Why didn't you admit that?" "You never asked me about it."

The selective publishing of research results also falls into category of omission.

Creating possibility for ambiguity in signage, writing, or speech for one's own gain is not necessarily lying, but is dishonest if intentional.

added 467 characters in body
Source Link
Zebrafish
  • 12.7k
  • 8
  • 37
  • 64

dishonesty
dishonest

In all your cases.

1Behaving or prone to behave in an untrustworthy, deceitful, or insincere way. ‘he was a dishonest hypocrite prepared to exploit his family’

1.1 Intended to mislead or cheat.
‘he gave the editor a dishonest account of events’
Oxford Living Dictionaries

Dishonesty does not have to mean lying. For example:

"If you're going to mention A which supports your argument, you should be honest and mention B which damns your argument."

Omission is not necessarily lying
The selective publishing of research results also falls into category of omission.

Creating possibility for ambiguity in signage, writing, or speech for one's own gain is not necessarily lying, but is dishonest if intentional.

dishonesty
dishonest

In all your cases.

1Behaving or prone to behave in an untrustworthy, deceitful, or insincere way. ‘he was a dishonest hypocrite prepared to exploit his family’

1.1 Intended to mislead or cheat.
‘he gave the editor a dishonest account of events’
Oxford Living Dictionaries

dishonesty
dishonest

In all your cases.

1Behaving or prone to behave in an untrustworthy, deceitful, or insincere way. ‘he was a dishonest hypocrite prepared to exploit his family’

1.1 Intended to mislead or cheat.
‘he gave the editor a dishonest account of events’
Oxford Living Dictionaries

Dishonesty does not have to mean lying. For example:

"If you're going to mention A which supports your argument, you should be honest and mention B which damns your argument."

Omission is not necessarily lying
The selective publishing of research results also falls into category of omission.

Creating possibility for ambiguity in signage, writing, or speech for one's own gain is not necessarily lying, but is dishonest if intentional.

Source Link
Zebrafish
  • 12.7k
  • 8
  • 37
  • 64

dishonesty
dishonest

In all your cases.

1Behaving or prone to behave in an untrustworthy, deceitful, or insincere way. ‘he was a dishonest hypocrite prepared to exploit his family’

1.1 Intended to mislead or cheat.
‘he gave the editor a dishonest account of events’
Oxford Living Dictionaries