-
1 apariencia engańosa
• deceptiveness• false image -
2 falsedad
f.1 falseness.2 falsehood, lie (mentira).* * *1 (hipocresía) falseness, hypocrisy; (doblez) duplicity2 (mentira) falsehood, lie* * *noun f.1) falseness2) lie* * *SF1) [de acusación, teoría] falseness, falsity; [de persona] falseness, insincerity2) (=mentira) lie, falsehood frm* * *a) ( de afirmación) falseness; ( de persona) insincerity, falsenessb) ( mentira) lie, falsehood (frml)* * *= falsehood, factoid, inauthencity, falsity, fallacy, mendacity, untruth, deceptiveness.Ex. If one probes more deeply into the question of truth and falsehood, one gets into difficult philosophical issues, which we prefer to leave to others.Ex. Most of the textbooks contain catalogues of decontextualized cultural factoids rather than strategies for identifying and understanding cultural differences.Ex. Critics of the digital world show fear of depersonalization, inauthenticty, subjugation to the mechanical and the substitution of quantity over quality.Ex. Although the legal profession intuitively knows the falsity of this assumption, researchers are still confident in implementing systems that use only the text of laws as their main source of knowledge.Ex. The article was titled 'Serial pricing and copyrights: prophecies, strategies and fallacies'.Ex. In light of his ongoing record of mendacity, it is puzzling why anyone would continue to take him seriously.Ex. Untruth brings about ill reputation and indignity.Ex. In some cases, public figures are famous because of their lies; in other cases, their renown obscures the universality of deceptiveness.* * *a) ( de afirmación) falseness; ( de persona) insincerity, falsenessb) ( mentira) lie, falsehood (frml)* * *= falsehood, factoid, inauthencity, falsity, fallacy, mendacity, untruth, deceptiveness.Ex: If one probes more deeply into the question of truth and falsehood, one gets into difficult philosophical issues, which we prefer to leave to others.
Ex: Most of the textbooks contain catalogues of decontextualized cultural factoids rather than strategies for identifying and understanding cultural differences.Ex: Critics of the digital world show fear of depersonalization, inauthenticty, subjugation to the mechanical and the substitution of quantity over quality.Ex: Although the legal profession intuitively knows the falsity of this assumption, researchers are still confident in implementing systems that use only the text of laws as their main source of knowledge.Ex: The article was titled 'Serial pricing and copyrights: prophecies, strategies and fallacies'.Ex: In light of his ongoing record of mendacity, it is puzzling why anyone would continue to take him seriously.Ex: Untruth brings about ill reputation and indignity.Ex: In some cases, public figures are famous because of their lies; in other cases, their renown obscures the universality of deceptiveness.* * *1 (de una afirmación) falseness; (de una persona) insincerity, falseness, hypocrisy* * *
falsedad sustantivo femenino
( de persona) insincerity, falseness
falsedad sustantivo femenino
1 falseness, (insinceridad) hypocrisy
2 (mentira) lie: su declaración estaba llena de falsedades, his declaration was riddled with lies
' falsedad' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
supuesta
- supuesto
- doblez
English:
falsehood
- spuriousness
- untruthfulness
- dishonesty
* * *falsedad nf1. [falta de verdad, autenticidad] falseness2. [mentira] falsehood, lie* * *f1 falseness2 ( mentira) lie* * *falsedad nf1) : falseness, hypocrisy2) mentira: falsehood, lie* * * -
3 mentira
intj.that's not true.f.1 lie.es mentira it's not true, it's a lieaunque parezca mentira strange as it may seemparece mentira que lo hayamos conseguido I can hardly believe we've done itparece mentira que te creas una cosa así how can you possibly believe a thing like that?¡parece mentira, las cinco y todavía no ha llegado! can you believe it, it's five o'clock and she's still hasn't arrived!de mentira pretend, falsedinero de mentira pretend moneyuna mentira como una casa a whopping great liementira piadosa white lie2 lying, falsehood, unsoundness.* * *1 lie\aunque parezca mentira strange though it may seemdecir mentiras to tell liesparece mentira it's unbelievablementira piadosa white lieuna mentira como una casa familiar a whopper* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (=embuste) lie¡mentira! — it's a lie!
•
de mentira, una pistola de mentira — a toy pistol•
parecer mentira, aunque parezca mentira — however incredible it seems, strange though it may seem¡parece mentira! — it's unbelievable!, I can't o don't believe it!
mentira caritativa, mentira oficiosa Cono Sur —
mentira piadosa, mentira reverenda — Cono Sur white lie
2) [en uñas] white mark ( on fingernail)3) (=errata) erratum* * *1) liementira! yo no le pegué — that's a lie, I didn't hit him!
ya lo he agarrado or pillado en una mentira en varias ocasiones — I've caught him lying to me several times
una araña de mentira or (Méx) de mentiras — (leng infantil) a toy spider
una mentira como una casa or catedral or un templo — (fam) a whopping great lie (colloq), a whopper (colloq)
2) (Esp fam) ( en la uña) white mark* * *= lie, fabrication, mendacity, fib, fibbing, untruth, false pretence, deceptiveness.Ex. Just because the facts don't support his views, he threatens, slanders, lies, obfuscates and charges ' lies, hypocrisy and cruelty'.Ex. The author looks at fabrication, falsification and plagiarism in scientific research.Ex. In light of his ongoing record of mendacity, it is puzzling why anyone would continue to take him seriously.Ex. Democracy's most acute failures tend to result from power brokers who tell big fibs about the distribution of power.Ex. When it comes to fibbing, women are far ahead of their male counterparts, a new survey has revealed.Ex. Untruth brings about ill reputation and indignity.Ex. That is what he does now, only now there is a lot of palaver and humbug and pretense of deliberation, which the bill proposes to continue, but which everybody can see would be a false pretense.Ex. In some cases, public figures are famous because of their lies; in other cases, their renown obscures the universality of deceptiveness.----* aunque parezca mentira = amazingly enough, believe it or not, incredibly, incredible though it may seem, incredibly enough, incredible as it may seem, strange though it may seem, strange as it may seem, although it may seem strange, although it may seem incredible.* de mentira = make-believe.* detector de mentiras = polygraph, lie detector.* difundir mentiras = spread + lies.* gran mentira = big fat lie.* la mentira = lying.* maraña de mentiras = web of lies, web of deception.* mentira descarada = blatant lie, bare-faced lie.* mentira gorda = big fat lie.* mentira histórica = historical fabrication.* mentira inocente = white lie.* mentira piadosa = white lie.* por muy mentira que parezca = incredibly, incredible though it may seem, strangely enough, incredibly enough, incredible as it may seem, strange though it may seem, strange as it may seem, although it may seem strange, although it may seem incredible.* propagar mentiras = spread + lies.* trama de mentiras = tissue of lies.* una sarta de mentiras = a sackful of lies, a pack of lies.* * *1) liementira! yo no le pegué — that's a lie, I didn't hit him!
ya lo he agarrado or pillado en una mentira en varias ocasiones — I've caught him lying to me several times
una araña de mentira or (Méx) de mentiras — (leng infantil) a toy spider
una mentira como una casa or catedral or un templo — (fam) a whopping great lie (colloq), a whopper (colloq)
2) (Esp fam) ( en la uña) white mark* * *= lie, fabrication, mendacity, fib, fibbing, untruth, false pretence, deceptiveness.Ex: Just because the facts don't support his views, he threatens, slanders, lies, obfuscates and charges ' lies, hypocrisy and cruelty'.
Ex: The author looks at fabrication, falsification and plagiarism in scientific research.Ex: In light of his ongoing record of mendacity, it is puzzling why anyone would continue to take him seriously.Ex: Democracy's most acute failures tend to result from power brokers who tell big fibs about the distribution of power.Ex: When it comes to fibbing, women are far ahead of their male counterparts, a new survey has revealed.Ex: Untruth brings about ill reputation and indignity.Ex: That is what he does now, only now there is a lot of palaver and humbug and pretense of deliberation, which the bill proposes to continue, but which everybody can see would be a false pretense.Ex: In some cases, public figures are famous because of their lies; in other cases, their renown obscures the universality of deceptiveness.* aunque parezca mentira = amazingly enough, believe it or not, incredibly, incredible though it may seem, incredibly enough, incredible as it may seem, strange though it may seem, strange as it may seem, although it may seem strange, although it may seem incredible.* de mentira = make-believe.* detector de mentiras = polygraph, lie detector.* difundir mentiras = spread + lies.* gran mentira = big fat lie.* la mentira = lying.* maraña de mentiras = web of lies, web of deception.* mentira descarada = blatant lie, bare-faced lie.* mentira gorda = big fat lie.* mentira histórica = historical fabrication.* mentira inocente = white lie.* mentira piadosa = white lie.* por muy mentira que parezca = incredibly, incredible though it may seem, strangely enough, incredibly enough, incredible as it may seem, strange though it may seem, strange as it may seem, although it may seem strange, although it may seem incredible.* propagar mentiras = spread + lies.* trama de mentiras = tissue of lies.* una sarta de mentiras = a sackful of lies, a pack of lies.* * *A lieeso es mentira that's a lie¡mentira! yo no le pegué that's a lie, I didn't hit him!estoy harto de tus mentiras I'm tired of your lying o lies¿por qué dices tantas mentiras? why do you tell so many lies?, why do you lie so much?ya lo he agarrado or cogido en una mentira en varias ocasiones he's lied to me on several occasions, I've caught him lying several timesparece mentira que a tu edad te dé por hacer esas tonterías I'm amazed at you getting up to such silly antics at your ageparece mentira que no haya venido a verme I can't believe that he hasn't been to see mellevan casados once años — ¡parece mentira! ¡cómo pasa el tiempo! they've been married eleven years — isn't it incredible! o it hardly seems possible! doesn't time fly!aunque parezca mentira tiene 50 años you may find it hard to believe but she's 50no quiero seguir viviendo en la mentira I don't want to go on living a lieuna araña de mentira or ( Méx) de mentiras ( leng infantil); a toy spiderme ha llamado tonta — ¡pero se lo dije de mentira! or ¡pero fue de mentira! he said I was stupid — I was only joking! o I didn't mean it!una mentira como una casa or catedral or un templo ( fam); a whopping great lie ( colloq), a whopper ( colloq)las mentiras tienen patas cortas truth will outCompuesto:white lieB ( fam) (en la uña) white mark* * *
Del verbo mentir: ( conjugate mentir)
mentirá es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) futuro indicativo
Multiple Entries:
mentir
mentira
mentir ( conjugate mentir) verbo intransitivo
to lie;
mentira sustantivo femenino
lie;
eso es mentira that's a lie;
¡mentira! yo no le pegué that's a lie, I didn't hit him!;
¡parece mentira! ¡cómo pasa el tiempo! isn't it incredible! doesn't time fly!;
mentira piadosa white lie;
una araña de mentira or (Méx) de mentiras (leng infantil) a toy spider;
una mentira como una casa or un templo (fam) a whopping great lie (colloq), a whopper (colloq)
mentir verbo intransitivo to lie, tell lies
miente como un bellaco, he's a real liar ➣ Ver nota en lie
mentira sustantivo femenino lie: mentira piadosa, white lie
♦ Locuciones: parecer mentira: aunque parezca mentira, strange as it may seem
parece mentira que tenga esa edad, it is incredible that he is that old
' mentira' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
bola
- camelo
- decir
- descarada
- descarado
- engaño
- engendrar
- falsedad
- invención
- inventar
- novela
- oír
- pegote
- piadosa
- piadoso
- tamaña
- tamaño
- transparente
- burdo
- chiva
- coba
- cuento
- fábula
- flagrante
- grande
- macana
- mito
- parecer
- que
- rollo
- solemne
English:
barefaced
- blatant
- blatantly
- deceit
- downright
- fabrication
- fall for
- invention
- lie
- lying
- oddly
- out-and-out
- outright
- story
- transparent
- white lie
- whopper
- make
- pretend
- strangely
- white
* * *mentira nf1. [falsedad] lie;¡mentira cochina! that's a filthy lie!;siempre soy yo el que tiene que lavar los platos – ¡mentira! I'm always the one who has to wash the dishes – that's not true! o that's a lie!;es mentira it's a lie, it's not true;decir mentiras to tell lies;de mentira pretend, false;parecer mentira: aunque parezca mentira strange as it may seem;parece mentira que lo hayamos conseguido I can hardly believe we've done it;parece mentira que te creas una cosa así how can you possibly believe a thing like that?;¡parece mentira, las cinco y todavía no ha llegado! can you believe it, it's five o'clock and she still hasn't arrived!mentira piadosa white lie* * *f lie;¡parece mentira! that’s incredible!* * *mentira nf: lie* * *mentira n liede mentira pretend / toy -
4 naturaleza engañosa
(n.) = deceptivenessEx. In some cases, public figures are famous because of their lies; in other cases, their renown obscures the universality of deceptiveness.* * *(n.) = deceptivenessEx: In some cases, public figures are famous because of their lies; in other cases, their renown obscures the universality of deceptiveness.
-
5 engañoso
adj.1 deceitful, deceiving, deceptive, liar.2 delusive, misleading, illusive, delusional.* * *► adjetivo1 (gen) deceptive2 (palabras) deceitful; (consejo) misleading* * *(f. - engañosa)adj.1) misleading2) deceitful* * *ADJ (=persona) deceitful, dishonest; (=apariencia) deceptive; (=consejo) misleading* * ** * *= deceptive, fallacious, deceitful, devious, sneaky [sneakier -comp., sneakiest -sup.], specious, duplicitous, distortive.Ex. Rehyping old stuff as if it were new is not only annoyingly deceptive but doesn't sell any books to suspicious customers.Ex. On the basis of current knowledge it seems fallacious to describe people's consumer behavior as having clear-cut objectives.Ex. Again, on the matter of the sources already consulted by the enquirer, the implication is not that he is unreliable or deceitful, but that in looking up the Encyclopedia Americana he may not be aware of the existence of the index.Ex. The article is entitled 'The devious, the distraught and the deranged: designing and applying personal safety into library protection'.Ex. The article carries the title 'Holdouts and other sneaky vendor tactics: no one profits when providers keep searchers from finding information'.Ex. This comparative frame of reference is specious and irrelevant on several counts.Ex. This remake of William Castle's action adventure adds a genuinely supernatural plot to the old story of the duplicitous wife scheming to kill her husband but being one-upped by his even more ingenious counterplots.Ex. Its distortive influence on feminist research has so far remained undiscussed.----* de apariencia engañosa = misleading.* naturaleza engañosa = deceptiveness.* palabra engañosa = weasel word.* * ** * *= deceptive, fallacious, deceitful, devious, sneaky [sneakier -comp., sneakiest -sup.], specious, duplicitous, distortive.Ex: Rehyping old stuff as if it were new is not only annoyingly deceptive but doesn't sell any books to suspicious customers.
Ex: On the basis of current knowledge it seems fallacious to describe people's consumer behavior as having clear-cut objectives.Ex: Again, on the matter of the sources already consulted by the enquirer, the implication is not that he is unreliable or deceitful, but that in looking up the Encyclopedia Americana he may not be aware of the existence of the index.Ex: The article is entitled 'The devious, the distraught and the deranged: designing and applying personal safety into library protection'.Ex: The article carries the title 'Holdouts and other sneaky vendor tactics: no one profits when providers keep searchers from finding information'.Ex: This comparative frame of reference is specious and irrelevant on several counts.Ex: This remake of William Castle's action adventure adds a genuinely supernatural plot to the old story of the duplicitous wife scheming to kill her husband but being one-upped by his even more ingenious counterplots.Ex: Its distortive influence on feminist research has so far remained undiscussed.* de apariencia engañosa = misleading.* naturaleza engañosa = deceptiveness.* palabra engañosa = weasel word.* * *engañoso -sa‹palabras› deceitful; ‹apariencias› deceptive* * *
engañoso
‹ apariencias› deceptive
engañoso,-a adj (mentiroso, falaz) deceitful
(apariencia) deceptive
' engañoso' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
amagar
- engañosa
- falaz
English:
deceptive
- misleading
- deceitful
* * *engañoso, -a adj1. [aspecto, apariencia, impresión] deceptive2. [persona, palabras] deceitful* * ** * *engañoso, -sa adj1) : deceitful2) : misleading, deceptive* * *engañoso adj deceptive -
6 charlatanería
f.1 uncontrolled talkativeness, idle talk, blab, chatter.2 unsustained claim.3 quackery, deceptiveness, false pretenses, charlatanism.* * *1 (palabrería) verbosity, talkativeness2 (de vendedor) spiel, patter* * *SF1) (=locuacidad) talkativeness; pey hot air2) (=chismorreo) gossip3) (=engaños) quackery, charlatanism4) [de vendedor] sales talk, patter* * *a) ( locuacidad) talkativenessb) ( arte de vender) clever o cunning salesmanship; ( palabras) patter* * *= chatter, charlatanism.Ex. Thoughts of this sort kept running about like clockwork mice in his head, while the murmur of chatter filled the room and outside dusk had yielded to black night.Ex. Simon's work is fascinating as a piece of charlatanism, as a text it is a dull read.----* charlatanería falsa = cant.* * *a) ( locuacidad) talkativenessb) ( arte de vender) clever o cunning salesmanship; ( palabras) patter* * *= chatter, charlatanism.Ex: Thoughts of this sort kept running about like clockwork mice in his head, while the murmur of chatter filled the room and outside dusk had yielded to black night.
Ex: Simon's work is fascinating as a piece of charlatanism, as a text it is a dull read.* charlatanería falsa = cant.* * *1 (locuacidad) talkativeness2 (arte de vender) clever o cunning salesmanship; (palabras) patter, spiel* * *1. [locuacidad] talkativeness* * *f talkativeness -
7 naturaleza2
2 = nature, character.Ex. In this chapter a review of the development of cataloguing codes is given in order to explain and place in context the nature of modern cataloguing codes.Ex. Close attention to the role of the computer specialist reveals more of the character of reference activities.----* de naturaleza = in nature.* de tal naturaleza = such that.* naturaleza engañosa = deceptiveness.* naturaleza humana = human nature.* naturaleza judía = Jewishness.* por naturaleza = by nature, by definition, characteristically, natural-born, naturally, inherently.* por + Posesivo + (propia) naturaleza = in + Posesivo + nature.* por su naturaleza = by + Posesivo + nature.* venir por naturaleza a = come + naturally to, be second nature to + Pronombre.* verdadera naturaleza, la = true nature, the. -
8 naturaleza
f.1 nature.se desconoce la naturaleza de la enfermedad the nature of the illness is unknownuna persona de naturaleza nerviosa a person of a nervous disposition, a person who is nervous by naturepor naturaleza by naturela madre naturaleza Mother Naturela naturaleza humana human naturenaturaleza muerta still lifeaman a la naturaleza they love nature, they are nature lovers2 constitution.* * *1 nature2 (temperamento) nature, character3 (complexión) physical constitution4 (clase, tipo) nature, kind\en plena naturaleza in the wildpor naturaleza by naturenaturaleza humana human nature, human conditionnaturaleza muerta ARTE still lifeprotección de la naturaleza nature conservation* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (=universo físico) nature2) (=campo) nature3) (=carácter) nature4) (=constitución) constitution5) (=especie) nature6) (Arte)7) † (Pol) nationality8)romper la naturaleza — † to start to menstruate
* * *1) (Ecol)2) ( índole) nature3) (ant) ( nacionalidad) nationality* * *1) (Ecol)2) ( índole) nature3) (ant) ( nacionalidad) nationality* * *naturaleza22 = nature, character.Ex: In this chapter a review of the development of cataloguing codes is given in order to explain and place in context the nature of modern cataloguing codes.
Ex: Close attention to the role of the computer specialist reveals more of the character of reference activities.* de naturaleza = in nature.* de tal naturaleza = such that.* naturaleza engañosa = deceptiveness.* naturaleza humana = human nature.* naturaleza judía = Jewishness.* por naturaleza = by nature, by definition, characteristically, natural-born, naturally, inherently.* por + Posesivo + (propia) naturaleza = in + Posesivo + nature.* por su naturaleza = by + Posesivo + nature.* venir por naturaleza a = come + naturally to, be second nature to + Pronombre.* verdadera naturaleza, la = true nature, the.* * *A ( Ecol):la naturaleza naturevivir en contacto con la naturaleza to live close to naturedejemos obrar a la naturaleza let's allow nature to take its courseCompuesto:still lifeB (índole) natureafecciones de naturaleza alérgica diseases of an allergic naturela naturaleza humana human natureconozco mi naturaleza y sé cómo voy a reaccionar I know what I'm like and I know how I'll reactes indolente por naturaleza he's naturally lazyes de naturaleza agresiva y violenta he's aggressive and violent by nature, he has an aggressive and violent natureC ( ant) (nacionalidad) nationality* * *
naturaleza sustantivo femeninoa) (Ecol):
naturaleza muerta still life
naturaleza sustantivo femenino
1 nature: es de naturaleza tímida, she's shy by nature
Arte naturaleza muerta, still life
2 (clase, tipo) nature: no hagas comentarios de esa naturaleza, don't make remarks of that kind
3 (constitución) physical constitution
' naturaleza' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
carácter
- carta
- índole
- maravilla
- prodigio
- secreta
- secreto
- temperamento
- condición
- conservar
- consistir
- diverso
- dotar
- espíritu
- humano
- por
- ser
English:
commune
- dominant
- freak
- love
- naturally
- nature
- nature conservation
- secret
- self-fulfilling
- sweet
- tame
- temperamentally
- wild
- human
- still
* * *naturaleza nf1.la naturaleza [seres del universo] nature;aman a la naturaleza they love nature, they are nature lovers;por naturaleza by nature;la madre naturaleza Mother Naturenaturaleza muerta still life2. [características] nature;se desconoce la naturaleza de la enfermedad the nature of the illness is unknown3. [complexión] constitution4. [carácter] nature;la naturaleza humana human nature;una persona de naturaleza nerviosa a person of a nervous disposition, a person who is nervous by nature5. [tipo, clase] nature;prefiero no meterme en negocios de esa naturaleza I prefer not to get involved in deals of that nature o in that kind of deal* * *f1 nature2 ( índole) kind, type* * *naturaleza nf1) : naturela madre naturaleza: mother nature2) índole: nature, disposition, constitutionla naturaleza humana: human nature3)naturaleza muerta : still life* * *naturaleza n nature -
9 apariencia engañosa
f.false pretenses, deceptiveness, false image, false front.
См. также в других словарях:
Deceptiveness — De*cep tive*ness, n. The power or habit of deceiving; tendency or aptness to deceive. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
deceptiveness — index deceit, fraud, misrepresentation Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
deceptiveness — noun see deceptive … New Collegiate Dictionary
deceptiveness — See deceptive. * * * … Universalium
deceptiveness — noun The state or quality of being deceptive … Wiktionary
deceptiveness — n. deceitfulness, dishonesty, treachery … English contemporary dictionary
deceptiveness — de·cep·tive·ness … English syllables
deceptiveness — See: deceptive … English dictionary
deceptiveness — noun the quality of being deceptive • Syn: ↑obliquity • Derivationally related forms: ↑oblique (for: ↑obliquity), ↑deceptive • Hypernyms: ↑dishonesty … Useful english dictionary
Information manipulation theory — (IMT)( [http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/preview/0312259492/meetauthor.aspx McCornack] , 1992;( [http://www.bedfordstmartins.com/preview/0312259492/meetauthor.aspx McCornack] , [http://comm.msu.edu/people/faculty/149 Levine] , Torres, Campbell,… … Wikipedia
Doctrine of foreign equivalents — This article discusses the trademark doctrine regarding translation of foreign words. For the patent doctrine regarding equivalent means to practice an invention, see Doctrine of equivalents. The doctrine of foreign equivalents is a rule applied… … Wikipedia