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Feints

A feint is a deceptive action intended to mislead an opponent about a person’s intended target, timing, or action. It may be a movement, gesture, or sequence of actions designed to provoke a response while the true action is directed elsewhere.

In martial arts and combat sports, feints aim to provoke defensive reactions—parry, block, retreat, or commitment—while

In team sports and military contexts, feints exploit anticipation and misdirection to create openings or seize

Effectiveness depends on timing, credibility, and risk management. An obvious feint may be ignored; a subtle

The term derives from the French feindre “to pretend,” from Latin fingere “to shape or pretend.” Feints

the
attacker
moves
to
a
different
line.
Common
forms
include
body
feints,
hand
feints,
eye
feints,
head
feints,
and
step
feints.
In
fencing,
for
example,
a
feint
is
an
apparent
thrust
meant
to
draw
a
guard
movement.
space.
A
soccer
player
may
use
a
head
or
shoulder
fake
to
draw
a
defender
aside;
a
military
force
may
stage
a
feigned
attack
or
withdrawal
to
fix
the
enemy’s
attention
while
a
real
maneuver
unfolds.
or
well-timed
feint
can
force
a
premature
reaction
or
open
a
line
of
attack.
have
appeared
in
competitive
and
strategic
contexts
for
centuries
and
remain
a
common
tool
for
gaining
advantage
without
committing
to
the
immediate
action.