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1 Pretended
adj.P. προσποιητός.Sham: P. and V. πλαστός (Xen.), V. ποιητός.Seeming as opposed to real: P. and V. δοκῶν.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Pretended
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2 crocodile tears
(pretended tears of grief.) κροκοδείλια δάκρυα -
3 pretend
[pri'tend]1) (to make believe that something is true, in play: Let's pretend that this room is a cave!; Pretend to be a lion!; He wasn't really angry - he was only pretending.) προσποιούμαι,κάνω(πως)2) (to try to make it appear (that something is true), in order to deceive: He pretended that he had a headache; She was only pretending to be asleep; I pretended not to understand.) προσποιούμαι,προφασίζομαι•- pretence- false pretences -
4 sham
[ʃæm] 1. noun(something that is pretended, not genuine: The whole trial was a sham.) απάτη2. adjective(pretended, artificial or false: a sham fight; Are those diamonds real or sham?)3. verb(to pretend (to be in some state): He shammed sleep/anger; He shammed dead; I think she's only shamming.) προσποιούμαι,καμώνομαι,κάνω (ότι) -
5 assumed
adjective (pretended; not genuine: assumed astonishment; He wrote under an assumed name (= not using his real name).) προσποιητός -
6 discriminate
[di'skrimineit]1) ((with between) to make or see a difference between: It is difficult to discriminate between real and pretended cases of poverty.) διακρίνω2) ((often with against) to treat a certain kind of people differently: He was accused of discriminating against women employees.) κάνω διακρίσεις• -
7 façade
1) (the front of a building: the façade of the temple.) πρόσοψη2) (a pretended show: In spite of his bold façade, he was very frightened.) προσωπείο -
8 fake
[feik] 1. noun1) (a worthless imitation (especially intended to deceive); a forgery: That picture is a fake.) απομίμηση2) (a person who pretends to be something he is not: He pretended to be a doctor, but he was a fake.) κάλπης,απατεώνας2. adjective1) (made in imitation of something more valuable, especially with the intention of deceiving: fake diamonds.) ψεύτικος,πλαστός2) (pretending to be something one is not: a fake clergyman.) ψεύτικος3. verb(to pretend or imitate in order to deceive: to fake a signature.) πλαστογραφώ, προσποιούμαι -
9 feigned
adjective (pretended: feigned happiness.) προσποιητός -
10 mock
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11 put-on
adjective (pretended; not genuine: a put-on foreign accent; Her accent sounded put-on.) προσποιητός -
12 Affected
adj.Ar. and P. τρυφερός.Be affected: P. and V. τρυφᾶν.Pretended: P. προσποιητός, P. and V. πλαστός (Xen.), V. ποιητός.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Affected
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13 Artificial
Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Artificial
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14 Assumed
adj.Pretended: P. προσποιητός, P. and V. πλαστός; see Fictitious.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Assumed
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15 Fictitious
adj.Pretended P. προσποιητός.Made up: P. and V. πεπλασμένος, πλαστός (Xen.), V. σύνθετος, ποιητός (Eur., Hel. 1547).False: P. and V. ψευδής.Legendary: P. μυθώδης.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Fictitious
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16 Hypocritical
adj.Deceiving: P. ἀπατηλός, Ar. and V. δόλιος.Dissembling: P. εἰρωνικός.Pretended, feigned: P. and V. πλαστός (Xen.), P. προσποιητός. V. ποιητός.False: P. and V. ψευδής.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Hypocritical
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17 Mimic
adj.Imitative: P. μιμητικός.Pretended: P. προσποιητός; see fictitious:——————subs.Imitator: P. μιμητής, ὁ.——————v. trans.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Mimic
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18 Mock
adj.Pretended: P. προσποιητός, P. and V. πλαστός (Xen.).——————v. trans.P. and V. σκώπτειν (Eur., Cycl. 675, absol.), Ar. and P. χλευάζειν, ἐπισκώπτειν, τωθάζειν, V. κερτομεῖν.Laugh at: P. and V. γελᾶν (ἐπί, dat., or dat. alone), καταγελᾶν (gen.), ἐπεγγελᾶν (dat.), V. ἐγγελᾶν (dat., or κατά, gen.), διαγελᾶν (acc.), ἐγκατιλλώπτειν (dat.).Insult: P. and V. ὑβρίζειν (acc. or εἰς, acc.), ἐφυβρίζειν (acc., dat., or εἰς, acc.) (rare P.), προπηλακίζειν, P. ἐπηρεάζειν (dat.). Ar. and V. καθυβρίζειν (acc. or gen.).Baffle: P. and V. σφάλλειν, P. ἐκκρούειν.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Mock
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19 Nominal
adj.Pretended: P. προσποιητός.So called: P. λεγόμενος, P. and V. καλούμενος.Trifling: P. οὐδένος ἄξιος; see Trifling.Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Nominal
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20 Ostensible
Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Ostensible
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См. также в других словарях:
Pretended — Pre*tend ed, a. Making a false appearance; unreal; false; as, pretended friend. {Pre*tend ed*ly}, adv. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
pretended — index artificial, assumed (feigned), deceptive, delusive, evasive, fictitious, hypothetical, illusory … Law dictionary
pretended — [adj] alleged; imaginary affected, artificial, assumed, avowed, bluffing, bogus, charlatan, cheating, concealed, counterfeit, covered, dissimulated, factitious, fake, false, falsified, feigned, fictitious, impostrous, imposturous, lying, make… … New thesaurus
pretended — [prē ten′did, priten′did] adj. 1. not genuine; feigned 2. reputed or alleged … English World dictionary
Pretended — Pretend Pre*tend , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Pretended}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Pretending}.] [OE. pretenden to lay claim to, F. pr[ e]tendre, L. praetendere, praetentum, to stretch forward, pretend, simulate, assert; prae before + tendere to stretch. See… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
pretended — pretendedly, adv. /pri ten did/, adj. 1. insincerely or falsely professed: a pretended interest in art. 2. feigned, fictitious, or counterfeit: His pretended wealth was proved to be nonexistent. 3. alleged or asserted; reputed. [1425 75; late ME; … Universalium
pretended — pre|tend|ed [prıˈtendıd] adj something that is pretended appears to be real but is not ▪ Her eyes widened in pretended astonishment … Dictionary of contemporary English
pretended — pre•tend•ed [[t]prɪˈtɛn dɪd[/t]] adj. 1) insincerely or falsely professed: a pretended interest in art[/ex] 2) feigned; counterfeit: pretended wealth[/ex] … From formal English to slang
pretended — adjective Date: 15th century professed or avowed but not genuine < pretended affection > • pretendedly adverb … New Collegiate Dictionary
pretended — pre|tend|ed [ prı tendəd ] adjective not real or sincere: Terry s eyes widened in pretended surprise … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
pretended — adjective false or unreal, in spite of seeming to be true or real: pretended sorrow … Longman dictionary of contemporary English