August 30, 2005, 10:51
arnieBelies
An article about the singer Kylie Minogue in my newspaper showed a picture of her in Paris and commented:
quote:
Only the fact that she is wearing a headscarf belies the fact that she is suffering from breast cancer.
Is this some new use of
belies that I've not heard of? Or did the author mean
betrays perhaps?
August 30, 2005, 19:37
KallehArnie, was the context "betrays?" If so, I think it is used wrong. Yet, could it mean that only the fact that she is wearing a headscarf is
hiding the fact that she is suffering from breast cancer? In other words, she looks pale, exhausted and ill, but the headscarf makes her look perkier? I doubt it! I think he/she just used the word wrong!
August 30, 2005, 20:10
SeanahanMy feeling is it is a bad usage. The words belies and betrays are used in similar contexts, and the writer confused them. Take the following.
The bulging sweater betrayed the fact that the man had shoplifted.
The sweater belied the fact that the man had shoplifted.
August 31, 2005, 18:14
KallehYes, the only way it could be used correctly would be if the scarf were to have hidden the fact that she had cancer. However, that is very unlikely since many people with cancer treatments lose their hair and then wear scarves to hide their bald heads. So it is likely that the woman looked vibrant and healthy, but the scarf
betrayed the fact that she is suffering from breast cancer.
September 01, 2005, 11:12
arnieI don't have the paper now, but I seem to remember that the article started by explaining that the picture was of KM in walking Paris with her boyfriend and commented how well she looked. The sentence I quoted came next. The author obviously meant
betrays but I'm surprised a sub-editor (US: copy editor) didn't spot the mistake. It wasn't the
Grauniad, after all!