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frequently_asked_questions_files/Oxford Thesaurus.pdf

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fiasco n. failure, disaster, muddle, mess, abortion, botch, Colloq<br />

fizzle, flop: My effort to help Donald with his maths homework<br />

was a complete fiasco.<br />

fib n. 1 falsehood, (little) white lie, untruth, prevarication,<br />

fabrication, invention, misrepresentation, story, (fairy) tale,<br />

fiction; lie; Colloq tall story, US tall tale, cock-and-bull<br />

story, whopper: I told a little fib when I said my grandmother<br />

was ill.<br />

--v. 2 prevaricate, misrepresent, fudge, falsify, misspeak,<br />

palter; lie; Colloq waffle: They admitted they had fibbed about<br />

who had thrown the egg.<br />

fibre n. 1 filament, thread, strand, fibril, tendril: This fabric is<br />

woven from cotton fibre. 2 texture, structure, material,<br />

fabric: The fibre of this rock is granular. 3 essence,<br />

character, nature, mould, composition, constitution, substance,<br />

quality, stripe, cast, make-up: Love for him is wrapped up in<br />

the very fibre of her being.<br />

fickle adj. flighty, capricious, frivolous, unpredictable, moody,<br />

giddy, fanciful, whimsical, fitful, mercurial, volatile,<br />

unstable, changeable, mutable, inconstant, changeful, unsteady,<br />

unsteadfast, indecisive, undecided, vacillating or rarely<br />

vacillant, unsure, uncertain, irresolute, wavering, erratic,<br />

unreliable, undependable, irresponsible, untrustworthy,<br />

faithless, unfaithful, disloyal, Colloq wishy-washy: That<br />

fickle woman has already taken up with someone else. You should<br />

know how fickle the tastes of the public are.<br />

fictional adj. unreal, imaginary, invented, made-up, mythical, fanciful;<br />

legendary, fabulous: The newspaper article was a hoax -<br />

completely fictional. Lorna Doone is Janet's favourite fictional<br />

heroine.<br />

fictitious<br />

adj. 1 imagined, imaginary, non-existent, unreal, made-up,<br />

invented, fabricated, mythical, fancied, fanciful, fictive,<br />

untrue, apocryphal: The claim that an article had appeared was<br />

completely fictitious. 2 false, counterfeit, bogus, artificial,<br />

spurious; assumed, improvised, made-up, invented, make-believe,<br />

imaginary, Colloq phoney or US also phony: When arrested they

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