What's the difference between artifice and ruse?

Artifice


Definition:

  • (n.) A handicraft; a trade; art of making.
  • (n.) Workmanship; a skillfully contrived work.
  • (n.) Artful or skillful contrivance.
  • (n.) Crafty device; an artful, ingenious, or elaborate trick. [Now the usual meaning.]

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The authors describe a technical artifice, the use silicon-impregnated compresses, to help in the peroperative ultrasonographic detection of these section planes.
  • (2) The seriousness and sincerity were almost shocking in that den of artifice.
  • (3) More recently, Iain Sinclair, in his novel Dining on Stones, an elegy to the A13, describes it as: "A landscape to die for: haze lifting to a high clear morning, pylons, distant road, an escarpment of multi-coloured containers, a magical blend of nature and artifice."
  • (4) As I signed up, I decided to ask Martha a few questions to see how much of her was artifice.
  • (5) All of the suffering in Europe – inflicted in the service of a man-made artifice, the euro – is even more tragic for being unnecessary.
  • (6) There never will be sufficient financial resources, organizational artifice, or measurable standards to safeguard quality any other way.
  • (7) Poisonous and deleterious components are deemed to be "added," even if they are natural constituents of food, if any amount is present through the artifice of man.
  • (8) As such, the migration amendment bill seeks to implement a staggering legal artifice for a nation that claims to walk tall among the civilised.
  • (9) Technical artifices are described to assist compliance with these imperatives.
  • (10) "These are legal artifices created to result in paying less tax," he said.
  • (11) But this operation imposes technical artifices when direct urtero-vesical implantation is not possible.
  • (12) Close friends say this is not artifice, but reflects his personality; in any case positioning himself as the polar opposite of the frequently choleric Sarkozy has paid off in the polls.
  • (13) The less visible in the context of individual's facial architecture the more esthetic the prosthetic artifice is.
  • (14) It's almost as though the more outmoded a politician becomes, the more artifice is required to keep him fresh.
  • (15) We think that this artifice could also be used in case of anatomic variations of the hepatic artery like trifurcation.
  • (16) The essence of camp is its love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration.
  • (17) Barnard's unusual technique, highlighting the artifice in film-making, showed that no single person has a monopoly on truth – and certainly not the documentary director who shapes truth into a narrative in the editing process.
  • (18) The proper manoeuvres and artifices to avoid intraoperative accidents are suggested.
  • (19) Remarkable for its relentless skewering of artifice and pretension, Lucky Jim also contains some of the finest comic set pieces in the language.
  • (20) As Susan Sontag wrote, camp is artifice and theatricality and flamboyance.

Ruse


Definition:

  • (n.) An artifice; trick; stratagem; wile; fraud; deceit.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) He dictates the next rally and when Murray decides to go for another lob, Dimitrov is on to the ruse and swats a contemptuous smash away to seal the first set that flashed by in the blink of an eye!
  • (2) If so, it will provide the most compelling evidence yet that the News of the World's "rogue reporter" defence was a ruse designed to disguise the true extent of phone hacking at the paper.
  • (3) It is a ruse in order to get a second opinion … It is simply going nowhere.
  • (4) The ruse provoked a response from MLSsoccer.com , for whom Andy Edwards wrote: Whatever your feelings on USA Soccer Guy, your feelings toward the SFA should go something like this: We're sorry we beat you 5-1 last year , and we're also sorry that you're still bitter about it.
  • (5) Mackenzie, Tony Blair's former law and order adviser, was accused of setting up a ruse that allowed him to host events for paying clients.
  • (6) One ruse is to promise marriage to wealthy foreigners.
  • (7) In a further ruse to try to beat the counterfeiters, it has “milled” edges, with grooves on alternate sides.
  • (8) To do so, right under the noses of an often violent state apparatus, they will adopt all sorts of ruses to keep their identity secret or at least partly masked.
  • (9) The film is poignant because the man is an undercover FBI agent posing as a government official who has lured Chapman to the meeting under the ruse of getting her to pass a fake passport to another "illegal" – a spy who has embedded themselves in America society, outside the protection of the Russian embassy.
  • (10) Elections are due in 2015, but no one expects anything other than the same old ruses from Lukashenko.
  • (11) A new report by the International Crisis Group, a respected thinktank, found that Syrian rebel groups were playing up their Islamist credentials by growing Salafi-type beards, for example, as a ruse to secure arms from these conservative Gulf-based donors.
  • (12) This was an ill-conceived idea in its own time, and today a left-right compromise looks like nothing but a ruse to salvage a political class buffeted by Grillo's digital populism and widespread public contempt.
  • (13) Mackenzie, Tony Blair's former law and order adviser, was accused of setting up a ruse that allowed him to host events for paying clients, including on the terrace.
  • (14) In this view, expression of concern for human rights is not just hypocritical but a ruse.
  • (15) When Seigner's Wanda forces Almaric's Thomas to wear women's clothes at the end of Venus in Fur , it is hard not to wonder if this is another example of both disguised memoirs and masochistic ruse.
  • (16) But they have got into general circulation by an elaborate ruse.
  • (17) Sometimes the ruse plays upon a person's desire to make a profit from an outlandish investment proposal.
  • (18) To "fix" the region's unfixable Holocaust history, an array of cunning ruses was brought into play.
  • (19) But the government has adopted a culture of secrecy, as well as legal and parliamentary ruses, to hide from the public the extent that the NHS is being put up for sale to private healthcare companies.
  • (20) They see it as a Remainer ruse to stay in the EU in all but name.