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The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

The Oxford Thesaurus An A-Z Dictionary of Synonyms INTRO ...

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false adj. 1 untrue, unfactual, untruthful, wrong, amiss, mistaken,<br />

erroneous, incorrect, inaccurate, inexact, imprecise, faulty,<br />

flawed, invalid, unsound, unreal, imaginary, fictitious,<br />

spurious: <strong>The</strong> explorers gave a completely false picture <strong>of</strong> the<br />

local inhabitants. 2 untrue, untruthful, lying, misleading,<br />

fallacious, fabricated, made-up, concocted, mendacious,<br />

untrustworthy, fraudulent, meretricious, deceptive, deceitful,<br />

treacherous, Colloq phoney or US also phony: <strong>The</strong> testimony <strong>of</strong><br />

this witness is completely false. 3 counterfeit, imitation,<br />

simulated, sham, forged, fraudulent, fake, artificial,<br />

synthetic, manufactured, unnatural, spurious, bogus, ersatz,<br />

factitious, mock, pseudo, Colloq phoney or US also phony: Your<br />

false teeth look almost real. 4 sham, feigned, affected,<br />

insincere, faked, manufactured, counterfeit(ed): Don't shed any<br />

false tears over me when I'm gone. 5 illogical, fallacious,<br />

unsound, invalid, flawed, faulty: That conclusion could come<br />

only from false reasoning.<br />

falsehood n. lie, fib, prevarication, untruth, fabrication, misstatement,<br />

fiction, (fairy) tale, story, distortion, Colloq cock-and-bull<br />

story, Slang Brit load <strong>of</strong> codswallop: That was a complete<br />

falsehood about the goings-on in the attic, wasn't it?<br />

falsify v. fake, alter, distort, misstate, misrepresent, twist, Colloq<br />

fudge, trump up, Brit cook: <strong>The</strong> tax inspector found that the<br />

accounts had been falsified.<br />

falsity n. untruthfulness, mendacity, mendaciousness, fraudulence,<br />

deceptiveness, deceit, deceitfulness, dishonesty, spuriousness,<br />

speciousness, casuistry, hypocrisy, insincerity, falseness: <strong>The</strong><br />

prosecution was unable to prove the falsity <strong>of</strong> her statement.<br />

fame n. renown, repute, reputation, celebrity, illustriousness,<br />

superiority, pre-eminence, stardom, prominence, eminence, glory,<br />

name, notoriety, acclaim: Randolph's fame has spread far and<br />

wide.<br />

familiar adj. 1 well-known, common, commonplace, everyday, ordinary,<br />

current: That's a familiar melody. 2 frequent, usual,<br />

customary, habitual, routine, traditional: He strolled along<br />

his familiar route through the trees. 3 friendly, affable,<br />

close, intimate, sociable, social, free, free and easy, relaxed;

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