Is there one word for "being deceived into complying"?
Example sentence to use it in would be:
I will not be <deceived into complying> with the rules you have stated
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Sign up to join this communityDuped is a good word used most frequently for being led into doing something by false promises or trickery
A very common way you would hear it saw would be in a retort "He's not going to dupe me into doing that!" or an excuse "Why are you invovled on that side of the mess anyway? " "He duped me into it" ..
(things like that)
dupe at dictionary .com http://www.dictionary.com/browse/duped
- a person who is easily deceived or fooled; gull.
2.va person who unquestioningly or unwittingly serves a cause or another person:
a dupe of the opponents.
verb (used with object), duped, duping.
3. to make a dupe of; deceive; delude; trick.
While it might stretch the word a bit thin you might be understood without extra context
I won't be duped ~into~ your rules.
(I know that is a bit different than your sample sentence)
It does not strictly mean 'complying' however it is very frequently used for being made a pawn to serve another's aims -
... but 'serving unquestioningly/unwittingly' and 'being compliant to' are pretty close. ... but 'being compliant to' and "complying to' are slightly different
Another trip-up: the idiomatic usage is "duped into VERBing something" or "duped into a situation". In a way, some of the "complying" is another idiomatic method were we will drop a necessary verb when a word suggests the verb that would apply. Is "They were forced into unfair rules." ok or must it be "They were forced into complying with unfair rules." ?
I am just warning that there is something a little tricky in there. (thanks to @geneSummons comment in top section)
'Duped' fits the spirit of of a special type of deception that makes a person compliant. "Tricked into rules" might also suggest compliance as 'xxxx into rules' assumes compliance ... but "Tricked" might merely 'mislead' into an action, not cast a spell to make someone compliant to anothers wishes.
You might find that the word misled, or mislead in present tense, works quite well.
From the prefix mis-
Prefixed to verbs, with sense ‘badly’, ‘wrongly’, ‘perversely’, ‘mistakenly’, ‘amiss’.
And stem lead meaning, of course, to bring someone somewhere.
I will not be misled by your arguments.
source: Oxford English Dictionary
From Merriam-Webster:
transitive verb
3 : to deceive by false appearance
"I will not be hoodwinkedwithby the rules you have stated."
transitive verb
1 : to deceive by underhanded methods
"I will not be bamboozledwithby the rules you have stated."
transitive verb
slang: bamboozle, hoax
"I will not be hornswoggledwithby the rules you have stated."
lull
To deceive into trustfulness: "that honeyed charm that he used so effectively to lull his victims" (S.J. Perelman).
American Heritage Dictionary
to calm (someone or someone's fears, suspicions, etc), esp by deception
Collins English Dictionary
Or simply "trick"
I will not be tricked into complying with the rules you have stated.
You may be looking for manipulated
Manipulation can be open (think of a 3-year-old knowingly flashing her winning smile to get her way) or covert, in which case it takes on the meaning you seek. Merriam-Webster's 2b definition
to control or play upon by artful, unfair, or insidious means especially to one's own advantage. Ex:
being used and manipulated by the knowing men around him —New Republic
How about just plain tricked?
Trick: a crafty or underhanded device, maneuver, stratagem, or the like, intended to deceive or cheat; artifice; ruse; wile.
to win over by coaxing, flattery, or artful talk to lead [someone into a situation] or persuade [to do something] by cleverness or trickery
As in:
I will not be inveigled with [by] the rules you have stated.
Consider the term to cajole:
to persuade someone to do something they might not want to do, by pleasant talk and (sometimes false) promises
Your example sentence:
I will not be cajoled into complying with the rules you have stated.
Another similar word would be to beguile:
trick (someone) into doing something
Your example sentence:
I will not be beguiled into complying with the rules you have stated.
The root word for gullible, though not often used these days is appropriate:
gulled <-- see the verb entry
gull: to deceive, trick, or cheat
Though not so common, I always love a chance to use the word Skulduggery.
It can be used as a verb to fit your context:
You will not skuldug my compliance with your fancy words!
From OED:
skulduggery n. Underhand dealing, roguish intrigue or machination, trickery.
skuldug v. [as a back-formation.] nonce-wd. trans. to extract by trickery.
It seems to me that the answers provide synonyms for "deceived" but do not incorporate the "complying" element.
The closest I can come, though, to an answer to the question as asked is:
I will not be a sheep.
This, I feel, is quite close. It's not quite the part of speech you asked for but it does encapsulate in a single word not following a set of rules blindly or uncritically. The element of deception is strongly implied.
I hope this is helpful.
Perhaps the word you're looking for is Blinkered
Horses pulling carts and wagons, or racing would often wear a set of Blinkers, a mask designed to reduce their field of view to just the road ahead so as to remove distractions and make them more compliant.
In the same way, your Opposition in the example is attempting to blind the subject to alternative courses of action.
See also: Tunnel vision
Or, as an alternative. Railroaded
Being forced down a single path by another agency, with or without your awareness of the fact. Particularly common in narrative games to avoid having to adapt to the player's choices.
Conned would be a good choice
Persuade (someone) to do or believe something by lying to them. https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/con
Example:
I will not be Conned with the rules you have stated!
Edit*
As I re-read the question I would like to note that Conned fits your example better, however I would probably rewrite your example anyway if I were to pick any word currently answered, mine or other answers.
I will not be Conned into these rules!
My original Answer included the word Pressured but due to Conflicting views on its application as well as my original opinion that conned was a better word I have moved it here for legacy purposes.
I would personally use the word Pressured,
Attempt to persuade or coerce (someone) into doing something. https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/pressure
Example:
I will not be Pressured with the rules you have stated!
Suckered
The question addresses a ubiquitous issue of humanity. We are always trying to persuade others by hook or by crook. That is why there are so many valid answers.
by the rules
instead ofwith the rules
, does that matter?I will not be duped with/by the rules you have stated.
would be better phrased like,You will not dupe me into submitting to the rules you have quoted.