What is the meaning of FICTION. Phrases containing FICTION
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Acronyms & AI meanings
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FICTION
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n.
The inner meaning or significance of a fable, a narrative, an occurrence, an experience, etc.; the practical lesson which anything is designed or fitted to teach; the doctrine meant to be inculcated by a fiction; a maxim.
n.
The carrying back, and giving effect or operation to, an act or proceeding frrom some previous date or time, by a sort of fiction, as if it had happened or begun at that time. In such case the act is said to take effect by relation.
n.
A writer of fiction.
n.
An extravagant fiction embodying an account of some marvelous exploit or adventure.
n.
A hypocritical devotee. See the Dictionary of Noted Names in Fiction.
n.
An intricate, complicated plot, as of a drama or work of fiction.
n.
An invention; a fiction; something feigned or imagined.
n.
Any like assumption made for convenience, as for passing more rapidly over what is not disputed, and arriving at points really at issue.
n.
See in the Dictionary of Noted Names in Fiction.
n.
The act of feigning, inventing, or imagining; as, by a mere fiction of the mind.
n.
In fiction, the story of a play, novel, romance, or poem, comprising a complication of incidents which are gradually unfolded, sometimes by unexpected means.
n.
A fiction object or picture created by the imagination; the same when proposed as a pattern to be copied, or a standard to be reached; one of the archetypes or patterns of created things, conceived by the Platonists to have excited objectively from eternity in the mind of the Deity.
n.
A feigning to believe, as in the play of children; a mere pretense; a fiction; an invention.
n.
A fabrication to deceive; a fiction; a forgery; a falsehood.
n.
A nickname for a Puritan. See Roundheads, the, in the Dictionary of Noted Names in Fiction.
a.
Pertaining to, or characterized by, fiction; fictitious; romantic.
n.
An imaginary island, represented by Sir Thomas More, in a work called Utopia, as enjoying the greatest perfection in politics, laws, and the like. See Utopia, in the Dictionary of Noted Names in Fiction.
v. t.
To put into the form of novels; to represent by fiction.
n.
A fiction; a fable; an untruth.
n.
That which is real; an actual existence; that which is not imagination, fiction, or pretense; that which has objective existence, and is not merely an idea.
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