Pinocchio Nose

"There are two kinds of lies, lies with short legs and lies with long noses."

- The Adventures of Pinocchio

A character has some specific tell, often a particular tic which gives them away when they lie. Of course, another character is bound to pick up on this.

The Trope Namer, of course, is Pinocchio's nose, which increased in size whenever he lied.

The first step to becoming a Consummate Liar is to make sure you don't have any of these. These are impossible to hide from a Living Lie Detector. This is how You Can Always Tell a Liar. Not to be confused with a Gag Nose.

See also The Tell for characters with a tell that points to their emotional state rather than their honesty.

No relation to Pinocchio Syndrome.

Anime and Manga

 * In Chrono Crusade, Chrono realizes something's wrong when Rosette is blackmailed by the villain to go off by herself and follows her. When she asks how he knew something was wrong, he responds "When you lie, you start babbling. I've seen you do it for four years. I know at least that much about you."
 * Interestingly enough, this trope comes into play subtly again towards the end of the manga. When Chrono is trying to hide an ally's death that he can sense in another room, he closes his eyes and forces himself to smile, while babbling to Rosette about how they can celebrate their victory every year together (while she questions him about what's wrong). Eight chapters later, he once again closes his eyes and has a strained smile on his face when he tricks Rosette into.
 * In an episode of Digimon: Season Two, TK's brother Matt is making excuses for the current Digidestined one of their sisters, and she promptly calls bullshit, claiming people blink a lot when they lie. "Uhhhhh....*blinkblinkblinkblink*" She promises to take his excuse...for a date, much to his defeat.
 * Pinochimon (Puppetmon) in Digimon Xros Wars has the same quirk as the character he's named for.
 * Every time Monmon from Zatch Bell lies, his face will grow longer.
 * One episode of Hello Kitty Fairy Tale Fantasy retells the Pinocchio story, with the same results when Pinocchio lies. There's an additional twist, however--when the fairy says she's helped Pinocchio too many times, and she's not going to bail him out anymore, her nose grows.

Film

 * The Negotiator has a character use the same logic as the CSI example below.
 * The creators of Aladdin have confirmed that whenever Aladdin tells a lie, the feather on his Prince Ali hat falls in his face.
 * Not to mention Genie's literal Pinocchio Nose - and head - when Aladdin first tells him he'll wish for Genie's freedom.
 * In V for Vendetta, Evey can tell that a newsreader is giving a false report if she blinks a lot.
 * Airplane! has the doctor telling the passengers that nothing is wrong, everything is fine, and they will be landing shortly. His nose gets longer with every lie he tells.
 * Jack Byrnes, the father in Meet the Parents can tell Greg Focker is lying by feeling Greg's pulse.
 * Ffledleur Fflam's harp from The Black Cauldron, which always falls apart whenever he tells a lie.

Literature
"Carding: My dear Spelter, you blush when you inadvertently tell the truth.
 * Pinocchio's nose was both a tell that he was lying (an incredibly obvious tell, in fact), but it was also a a way of punishing him for it.
 * Mentioned and described in Mamet's House of Games.
 * Ron Weasley's ears go red when he's angry or lying.
 * Cathy's mother in V. C. Andrews' Flowers in the Attic plays with her pearl necklace -- or mimics playing with one if she doesn't have one on -- whenever she's nervous or lying.
 * In one of the Princess Diaries books, Mia's grandmother points out that Mia's nostrils flare when she lies.
 * In Robert Sawyer's Quintaglio Ascension Trilogy, the titular tyrannosaurian race literally turned blue in the face if they tried to tell a lie.
 * In Terry Pratchett's novel, Sourcery:

Spelter: I didn't blush!

Carding: Precisely my point."


 * Sam Vimes actually has one in the form of another character. Captain Carrot flinches whenever he hears a direct lie, so when Vimes tries to lie to Vetinari with Carrot in the room, Vetinari just watches Carrot's face.

Live Action TV

 * Ned from Pushing Daisies is a terrible liar in any case (Ned: "The plane was hijacked!" Coroner: "How'd you know that?" Ned: "DNA... ish."), but also gives himself away with his Twitchy Eye and unrelated babbling. Olive's tell is that she answers questions with questions when she's hiding something or trying to lie.
 * Lost, "There's No Place Like Home, Part 1": Jack explains that the fact that his stitches are bleeding means his appendectomy is healing. Kate says, "You know how when most people are lying, they can't look you in the eye? You do the exact opposite."
 * There was an episode of Hannah Montana all about this; whenever anyone would mention their own lying tics then she would end up doing it. Giggling and sweating were two of them, but there were more.
 * CSI example: Catherine was able to penetrate one witness' story by recalling her eye movement: "People tend to look left when remembering, right when creating." It's handy to know, but not infallibly reliable.
 * There was a whole Coupling ramble on this -- The Prickles, where you freeze and can feel said prickles all over your face ready to burst into rampant blushing; the Blurts, where you try to cover your prickles by blurting out denials; and the Head laugh, where you realize you were speaking too quickly and need to make everything seem alright and overcompensate with the Head Laugh.
 * In MacGyver, Jack Dalton's left eye twitches whenever he lies. It's mentioned in his first scene with Mac.
 * Including in his faked funeral.
 * In the Red Dwarf episode "The Inquisitor", Lister points out that Kryten's leg jiggles when he lies.
 * A couple of episodes actually have him say "Lie Mode" before saying something untrue. It's not clear whether or not he realizes he's doing it.
 * The whole point to the show Lie to Me is that the main cast has been trained to search for these when suspects in crimes are being interrogated. More specifically, Lightman actually claims in one episode that his tell is that he rubs his forehead while lying. (This was a setup for him to point out another character's, which was twisting her hands.) It's unclear whether he was actually telling the truth about that.
 * Used in an episode of The Lone Ranger, where the ranger used a villain's pulse as a lie detector.
 * Brick in The Middle has a very obvious tell: he simply whispers to himself "I'm lying."
 * In Titus, Christopher can tell when his fiance Erin is lying to him, because words not flow from her mouth good.
 * Once Upon a Time August isn't quite the convincing liar he would like to be. Then again,.

Newspaper Comics

 * Senator Bedfellow's nose actually grows while he's being interviewed on television in one Bloom County strip. "Hold it."
 * Hagar the Horrible; The horns on Hagar's helmet fall off if he tells a lie to his wife.

Theater
"Ragueneau: Have you been in some danger?
 * Cyrano De Bergerac: Aluded by Cyrano at Act II Scene III, after he has fought one hundred men, Cyrano has a slight cut on his hand and is talking casually to his friends Ragueneau and Lise:

Cyrano: None in the world.

Lise (shaking her finger at him): Methinks you speak not the truth in saying that!

Cyrano: Did you see my nose quiver when I spoke? 'Faith, it must have been a

monstrous lie that should move it!"

Video Games

 * Pointing these out is a vital gameplay elements in Apollo Justice : Ace Attorney. Particularly notable is the instance in which  Yikes.
 * In Tales of Symphonia, Colette always giggles when she lies. Lloyd notices this when Lloyd even says "You always do that fake giggle when you lie!"
 * In Kingdom Hearts, it's been noted that whenever Axel lies or is unsure of what he's saying he breaks eye-contact.

Western Animation

 * On Family Guy, Peter says he knows Ted Turner isn't telling the truth when he blinks twice. He first noticed it after watching a Barbara Walters interview, when Ted said he'd be with Jane Fonda forever.
 * On Ben 10 Alien Force, Kevin claims that Ben's left eyelid twitches whenever he lies. Fortunately, this also applies to an Evil Twin.
 * On Arthur, when the title character begins fidgeting with his glasses, it's almost certain that he's lying.
 * The Phineas and Ferb episode "The Beak" shows Phineas scratches his left ear whenever he lies.