do with mirrors

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English

Pronunciation

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Verb

do with mirrors (third-person singular simple present does with mirrors, present participle doing with mirrors, simple past did with mirrors, past participle done with mirrors)

  1. (transitive, idiomatic) To perform a magic or optical trick with the use of hidden mirrors, implying trickery and sham.
  2. (transitive, idiomatic) To do something as if by magic; a joking explanation of the fantastic or the unexplained.

Quotations

  • 1967, Jeanne R. Lowe, Cities in a Race with Time: Progress and Poverty in America's Renewing Cities, Random House, page 408,
    "Before, it was done so smoothly, they thought you did it with mirrors," Lee observed in the summer of 1960.
  • 1983, Christopher Durang, Titanic, Dramatists Play Service, Inc., →ISBN, page 13:
    No. It was all a trick. You only thought you gave birth. Harriet and I did it with mirrors.
  • 1989, Barbara Field, Playing With Fire (after Frankenstein), Dramatists Play Service, Inc., →ISBN page 52
    No, no, I confess. Guilty — I killed her. I did it with mirrors.
  • 1998, Armistead Maupin, More Tales of the City, HarperCollins, →ISBN, page 169:
    "I'd like to see that topless dancer across the street who turns into a gorilla.... Just to see how they do it. With mirrors, I guess."
  • 1998, "Jesus Feeds Five Thousand", in Nick Page, The Tabloid Bible, Westminster John Knox Press, →ISBN, page 123,
    "Maybe he did it with mirrors. Or perhaps he just used very thinly sliced bread...."
  • 2003, Thomas Laird, Into Tibet: The CIA's First Atomic Spy and His Secret Expedition to Lhasa, Grove Press, →ISBN, page 208:
    "Sometimes you have to do things with mirrors, and since we were getting no positive reaction out of Washington, we did it with mirrors. It was not paid for by the Tibetan government."

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