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1 ложь
1) General subject: bouncer, bung, confab, cracker, deception, fable, fabrication, falsehood, falseness, flam, humbug, jive, lie, lying, mendacity, porkies ("рифмованный слэнг" кокни, pork pies = porkies = lie = lies), porky, story, story telling, untruth, wiles, naivety (caught out with such a naivety - naive statement - euphemism for a lie), naпvetэ, tarradiddle2) Colloquial: story-telling, taradiddle, twister3) Obsolete: leasing4) Engineering: false (значение логической переменной)5) Mathematics: falsity6) Religion: falsity (Something false, lie), lies7) Law: false pretence, fraudulent pretence8) Australian slang: bulldust9) Diplomatic term: concoction, equivocation, slander10) Logics: false11) Psychology: confabulation (бесцельная)13) Jargon: bare-face (характеристика поведения человека), bare-faced (характеристика поведения человека), bareface (характеристика поведения человека), barefaced (характеристика поведения человека), boloney baloney, claptrap, cram, crammer, crock, hanky-panky, hop, hype, malarkey, marmalade, real cheese, spinach, stretcher, string, tall story, windy, scotts (He’s been telling scotts again.), lollapalooza (What a lollapalooza! You expect me to believe that? Что за ложь! Ты полагал что я поверю в это?), fudge (I've heard enough of your fudge. Let's get honest, okay? Я довольно наслушался твоей лжи.Давай правду, хорошо?), cheese14) Invective: crap, piece of shit, shit for the birds, chicken shit, hocky, hookey, hooky15) Robots: false (значение логической функции)16) Taboo: bird shit, bull, bullshit, crock of shit, pile of shit, tauri excretio
См. также в других словарях:
falsity — fal·si·ty / fȯl sə tē/ n pl ties 1: something false 2: the quality or state of being false did not establish the falsity of the statement Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
falsity — [fôl′sə tē] n. [ME falsete < OFr < L falsitas] 1. the condition or quality of being false; specif., a) incorrectness b) dishonesty c) deceitfulness d) disloyalty 2. pl. fals … English World dictionary
false|hood — «FLS hud», noun. 1. a false statement; lie: »His oral reports to the F.B.I. were laced with falsehoods (New York Times). SYNONYM(S): untruth, fib. See syn. under lie. (Cf. ↑lie) 2. the quality of being false; falsity: »the scandalous falsehood … Useful english dictionary
false — adj. & adv. adj. 1 not according with fact; wrong, incorrect (a false idea). 2 a spurious, sham, artificial (false gods; false teeth; false modesty). b acting as such; appearing to be such, esp. deceptively (a false lining). 3 illusory; not… … Useful english dictionary
falsity — /fawl si tee/, n., pl. falsities. 1. the quality or condition of being false; incorrectness; untruthfulness; treachery. 2. something false; falsehood. [1225 75; ME falsete < AF < LL falsitas. See FALSE, ITY] * * * … Universalium
falsity — fal•si•ty [[t]ˈfɔl sɪ ti[/t]] n. pl. ties 1) the quality or condition of being false; incorrectness; untruthfulness; treachery 2) something false; a falsehood • Etymology: 1225–75; ME falsete < AF < LL falsitās. See false, ity … From formal English to slang
falsity — noun (plural ties) Date: 13th century 1. something false ; lie 2. the quality or state of being false … New Collegiate Dictionary
falsity — /ˈfɔlsəti/ (say fawlsuhtee) noun (plural falsities) 1. the quality of being false; incorrectness; untruthfulness; treachery. 2. something false; a falsehood. {Latin falsitas; replacing Middle English falste, from Old French falsete} …
False imprisonment — is a tort, and possibly a crime, wherein a person is intentionally confined without legal authority.ElementsThe elements of the tort are: * Intent to confine another person against their will. In Australia, this element will be fulfilled if the… … Wikipedia
false — [[t]fɔ͟ːls[/t]] ♦♦♦ 1) ADJ If something is false, it is incorrect, untrue, or mistaken. It was quite clear the President was being given false information by those around him... You do not know whether what you re told is true or false... His… … English dictionary
false pretenses — Illegally obtaining money, goods, or merchandise from another by fraud or misrepresentation. As a statutory crime, although defined in slightly different ways in the various jurisdictions, consists generally of these elements: (1) an intent to… … Black's law dictionary