-
1 fiction
n. düş, uydurma, kurgu, hayâl ürünü şey, hayâl ürünü roman, roman, masal* * *hayal* * *['fikʃən](stories etc which tell of imagined, not real, characters and events (see also non-fiction): I prefer reading fiction to hearing about real events.) hayâl ürünü öykü- fictitious -
2 non-fiction
[non'fikʃən](books, magazines etc giving facts, information etc, ie not stories, novels, plays, poetry: I like reading fiction as well as non-fiction.) nesir edebiyatı, kurgusal olmayan yazı -
3 fact
n. gerçek, hakikat, olgu, unsur, durum, olay, eylem* * *1. gerçek 2. olgu* * *[fækt]1) (something known or believed to be true: It is a fact that smoking is a danger to health.) gerçek, hakikat2) (reality: fact or fiction.) gerçek, hakikat•- factual
- factually
- as a matter of fact, in fact, in point of fact -
4 science
n. bilim, ilim, fen, teknik, beceri* * *bilim* * *1) (knowledge gained by observation and experiment.) ilim2) (a branch of such knowledge eg biology, chemistry, physics etc.) fen bilimi3) (these sciences considered as a whole: My daughter prefers science to languages.) fen bilimleri•- scientifically
- scientist
- science fiction
См. также в других словарях:
fiction — ► NOUN 1) prose literature, especially novels, describing imaginary events and people. 2) invention as opposed to fact. 3) a false belief or statement, accepted as true for the sake of convenience. DERIVATIVES fictional adjective fictionality… … English terms dictionary
fiction — noun Etymology: Middle English ficcioun, from Middle French fiction, from Latin fiction , fictio act of fashioning, fiction, from fingere to shape, fashion, feign more at dough Date: 14th century 1. a. something invented by the imagination or… … New Collegiate Dictionary
fiction — noun 1 stories that are not true ADJECTIVE ▪ contemporary, modern ▪ classic ▪ popular, pulp ▪ literary, serious … Collocations dictionary
fiction — fic·tion n: legal fiction fic·tion·al adj Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. fiction … Law dictionary
fiction — noun 1) the popularity of South American fiction Syn: novels, stories, (creative) writing, (prose) literature; informal lit 2) the president dismissed the allegation as absolute fiction Syn: fabrication, invention, lies, fibs, untruth, false … Thesaurus of popular words
fiction — noun 1 (U) books and stories about imaginary people and events: popular fiction opposite nonfiction 2 (C) something that people want you to believe is true but which is not true: preserving the fiction of his happy childhood … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
fiction — noun 1) the traditions of British fiction Syn: novels, stories, literature, creative writing 2) this is an absolute fiction Syn: fabrication, invention, lie, fib, tall story, untruth … Synonyms and antonyms dictionary
fiction — noun 1》 prose literature, especially novels, describing imaginary events and people. 2》 a thing that is invented or untrue. ↘a false belief or statement, accepted as true because it is expedient to do so. Derivatives fictional adjective… … English new terms dictionary
fiction — noun a) Literary type using invented or imaginative writing, instead of real facts, usually written as prose. The company’s accounts contained a number of blatant fictions. b) Invention. I am a great reader of fiction. Syn: fabrication … Wiktionary
fiction — late 14c., something invented, from O.Fr. ficcion (13c.) dissimulation, ruse; invention, and directly from L. fictionem (nom. fictio) a fashioning or feigning, noun of action from pp. stem of fingere to shape, form, devise, feign, originally to… … Etymology dictionary
fiction */*/ — UK [ˈfɪkʃ(ə)n] / US noun Word forms fiction : singular fiction plural fictions 1) [uncountable] books and stories about imaginary events and people. Books that give facts about real events, things, or people are called non fiction Hardy wrote… … English dictionary