English
Noun
Big Lie (plural Big Lies)
- Alternative letter-case form of big lie.
2011 December 24, Joe Nocera, “The Big Lie”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN, archived from the original on 12 November 2020:When other panel members, after inspecting your evidence, reject your thesis, you claim that they did so for ideological reasons. […] Soon, the echo chamber you created drowns out dissenting views; even presidential candidates begin repeating the Big Lie.
2020, John Bolton, The Room Where It Happened[2], Simon & Schuster, →ISBN:First, we must do everything possible to ensure that China, and its contemporaneous disinformation campaign about the origin of the virus, will not succeed in proving that the Big Lie technique is alive and well in the twenty-first century.
2021 May 8, Maureen Dowd, “Liz Cheney and the Big Lies”, in The New York Times[3], →ISSN, archived from the original on 2 June 2021:Let’s acknowledge who created the template for Trump’s Big Lie. It was her father, Dick Cheney, whose Big Lie about the Iraq war led to the worst mistake in the history of American foreign policy.