1. two-faced - Adjective
2. two-faced - Adjective Satellite
marked by deliberate deceptiveness especially by pretending one set of feelings and acting under the influence of another
having two faces--one looking to the future and one to the past
Source: WordNetI could not tell Himmler everything because he was too false and two-faced. Walter Schellenberg
If you're gonna be two-faced at least make one of them pretty. Marilyn Monroe
What good was owning the world when he'd have no choice except to defend himself against every person in it? Personally, he'd rather be a beggar with one true friend than a prince surrounded by two-faced assassins.' (Aiden) Sherrilyn Kenyon
I never thought anything was strange in Puerto Rico other than the big mosquitos; because I was born there, nothing was really foreign to me. I think what I saw strange coming to L.A. was that a lot of people are a little bit two-faced. In Puerto Rico, you don't get that. Joyce Giraud
I will always be the virgin-prostitute, the perverse angel, the two-faced sinister and saintly woman. Anaïs Nin
Defensive players kind of have that two-faced kind of way of being able to be very aggressive on the football field and going out there and getting there job done. At the same time, from my own incidents and my own personality, I'm much a person that's very likable and lovable. Ndamukong Suh