A lie is a false statement to a person or a group made by another person or group who knows it is not the whole truth, intentionally.
According
to Dominika Osmols, by the age of four, 90 percent of children have
grasped the understanding of lying. The rates increase as they get
older. Everyone lies. 60 percent of adults can't have a ten minute
conversation without at least one lie being told.
With this being said, lies are common and the best way to figure out how to tell a lie isn't necessarily all through body movements. A person can catch a lie being told in several ways. The only problem that can not be solved is, everyone tells their lies different. Some people's voices may change, others may become jittery and/or stutter their words. The truth is, there is no way to actually figure out whether someone is lying to one's face or not. It is naturally impossible to be 100 percent certain on whether some one is lying. There has not even been a machine produced that can prove a lie with 100 percent certainty. A machine was created to try and accomplish this task.
With this being said, lies are common and the best way to figure out how to tell a lie isn't necessarily all through body movements. A person can catch a lie being told in several ways. The only problem that can not be solved is, everyone tells their lies different. Some people's voices may change, others may become jittery and/or stutter their words. The truth is, there is no way to actually figure out whether someone is lying to one's face or not. It is naturally impossible to be 100 percent certain on whether some one is lying. There has not even been a machine produced that can prove a lie with 100 percent certainty. A machine was created to try and accomplish this task.