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decipitur

Decipitur is a Latin verb form meaning “is deceived” or “is being deceived.” It is the third person singular present passive indicative of decipere, a verb meaning to deceive, mislead, or beguile. The form shows that the subject experiences deception rather than performing it. Decipere belongs to the third conjugation; its present passive paradigm is decipior, deciperis, decipitur, decipimur, decipimini, decipiuntur. The corresponding perfect passive participle is deceptus, used with forms of sum to express perfect passive constructions (for example, deceptus est, “he has been deceived”).

Etymology and usage notes: decipere is derived from de- “away” + capere “to take,” historically conveying the

Examples: Populus decipitur ab mendacibus consiliis. Translation: The people are deceived by lying counsels. Quidam decipiuntur

In translation, decipitur is typically rendered as “is deceived” or “is being deceived,” preserving the passive

sense
of
taking
someone
in
or
deceiving
them.
Decipitur
occurs
across
classical,
medieval,
and
ecclesiastical
Latin,
in
narratives,
rhetoric,
and
moral
or
legal
prose,
to
indicate
that
a
subject
is
misled
by
another
agent
or
by
circumstances.
The
agent
in
a
passive
construction
can
be
introduced
by
a
or
ab
+
ablative
(e.g.,
ab
mendacibus
consiliis,
by
lying
counsels).
a
sophisticis
argumentis.
Translation:
Some
are
deceived
by
sophistic
arguments.
voice
and
focal
idea
of
deception
rather
than
action.