God turns to the woman, and Targum Pseudo-Jonathan on (Genesis 3:13) lets Eve expand on the Hebrew's terse "the serpent beguiled me." In the Targum she says, "The serpent beguiled me with his subtilty, and deceived me with his wickedness, and I ate."
Two verbs, two faults. Subtilty — cunning, cleverness. Wickedness — malice. Eve names both the intellectual and moral dimensions of the deception. She was not simply outsmarted; she was lied to by someone who wanted her to fall. The Targumist lets her tell the truth of what happened without excusing her. She still ends the sentence with "and I ate." The serpent's wickedness did not eat the fruit. She did.