Another word for lying

  • misleading
  • dissembling
  • dissimulating
  • double-crossing
  • double-dealing
  • equivocating
  • falsifying
  • fibbing
  • inventing
  • misrepresenting
  • misstating
  • prevaricating
  • two-timing
  • wrong
  • committing perjury
  • deceitful
  • deceptive
  • delusive
  • delusory
  • false
  • guileful
  • mendacious
  • perfidious
  • shifty
  • treacherous
  • tricky
  • two-faced
  • unreliable
  • untruthful

See also synonyms for: lyings

On this page you’ll find 65 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to lying, such as: misleading, dissembling, dissimulating, double-crossing, double-dealing, and equivocating.

Roget’s 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

TRY USING lying

See how your sentence looks with different synonyms.

How to use lying in a sentence

She also wasn’t punished for lying, since the Congressional Human Rights Caucus — now called the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission — amounts to little more than a political PR arena.

THE GREAT LIE OF THE FIRST GULF WARMAT NASHEDAUGUST 17, 2020OZY

This, however, did not apply to the waters lying directly around the Poloe and Flatland groups.

THE GIANT OF THE NORTHR.M. BALLANTYNE

The Seven-score and four on the six middle Bells, the treble leading, and the tenor lying behind every change, makes good Musick.

TINTINNALOGIA, OR, THE ART OF RINGINGRICHARD DUCKWORTH AND FABIAN STEDMAN

SYNONYM OF THE DAY

OCTOBER 26, 1985

WORDS RELATED TO LYING

  • affected
  • artificial
  • assuming
  • bland
  • canting
  • captious
  • caviling
  • deceptive
  • deluding
  • dissembling
  • double
  • double-dealing
  • duplicitous
  • faithless
  • false
  • feigning
  • fishy
  • fraudulent
  • glib
  • hollow
  • insincere
  • jivey
  • left-handed
  • lying
  • moralistic
  • oily
  • pharisaic
  • pharisaical
  • phony
  • pietistic
  • pious
  • sanctimonious
  • self-righteous
  • smooth
  • smooth-spoken
  • smooth-tongued
  • snide
  • specious
  • spurious
  • two-faced
  • unctuous
  • unnatural
  • unreliable
  • crafty
  • criminal
  • deceitful
  • devious
  • dishonest
  • dishonorable
  • double-dealing
  • dubious
  • fraudulent
  • illegal
  • indirect
  • iniquitous
  • lying
  • nefarious
  • questionable
  • ruthless
  • shady
  • shifty
  • suborned
  • treacherous
  • underhand
  • unlawful
  • unprincipled
  • unscrupulous
  • untruthful
  • artful
  • astucious
  • astute
  • beguiling
  • clandestine
  • counterfeit
  • crafty
  • cunning
  • deceiving
  • deceptive
  • delusive
  • delusory
  • designing
  • disingenuous
  • double-dealing
  • duplicitous
  • fallacious
  • false
  • feline
  • foxy
  • fraudulent
  • furtive
  • guileful
  • hypocritical
  • illusory
  • impostrous
  • indirect
  • insidious
  • knavish
  • lying
  • mendacious
  • misleading
  • rascal
  • roguish
  • shifty
  • slick
  • sly
  • sneaky
  • stealthy
  • subtle
  • treacherous
  • tricky
  • two-faced
  • underhand
  • underhanded
  • untrustworthy
  • untruthful
  • wily
  • artifice
  • beguilement
  • betrayal
  • blarney
  • cheat
  • circumvention
  • cozenage
  • craftiness
  • cunning
  • deceit
  • deceitfulness
  • deceptiveness
  • defraudation
  • disinformation
  • dissimulation
  • double-dealing
  • dupery
  • duplicity
  • equivocation
  • falsehood
  • flimflam
  • fraud
  • fraudulence
  • guile
  • hokum
  • hypocrisy
  • imposition
  • insincerity
  • juggling
  • legerdemain
  • lying
  • mendacity
  • pretense
  • prevarication
  • sophism
  • treachery
  • treason
  • trickery
  • trickiness
  • trumpery
  • untruth
  • ambiguous
  • astucious
  • beguiling
  • bum
  • catchy
  • crafty
  • cunning
  • deceitful
  • deceiving
  • deluding
  • delusive
  • delusory
  • designing
  • disingenuous
  • fake
  • fallacious
  • false
  • fishy
  • foxy
  • fraudulent
  • illusory
  • imposturous
  • indirect
  • insidious
  • lying
  • misleading
  • mock
  • oblique
  • off
  • phony
  • plausible
  • rascal
  • roguish
  • scheming
  • seeming
  • serpentine
  • shifty
  • slick
  • slippery
  • sly
  • sneaky
  • snide
  • specious
  • spurious
  • subtle
  • treacherous
  • tricky
  • two-faced
  • underhand
  • underhanded
  • unreliable
  • wily
  • ambidextrous
  • crooked
  • dishonest
  • double
  • duplicitous
  • fraudulent
  • hypocritical
  • insincere
  • left-handed
  • lying
  • perfidious
  • sneaky
  • swindling
  • treacherous
  • tricky
  • two-faced
  • two-timing
  • underhanded
  • untrustworthy
  • wily

Roget’s 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

What is another word for Lying?

  • dishonesty, untruthfulness

Use filters to view other words, we have 853 synonyms for lying.

Synonyms for lying

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Similar words of lying

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What is another word for lying?

564 synonyms found

Pronunciation:

[ lˈa͡ɪɪŋ], [ lˈa‍ɪɪŋ], [ l_ˈaɪ_ɪ_ŋ]

Table of Contents

  • adj.

    crooked (adjective)

    • shady,
    • illegal.

    deceitful (adjective)

    • dis-ingenuous,
    • most rascal,
    • de signing,
    • under handed,
    • more deceiving,
    • most impostrous,
    • slick,
    • most deceiving,
    • more astucious,
    • most beguiling,
    • more feline,
    • mis leading,
    • dis ingenuous,
    • un trustworthy,
    • more beguiling,
    • de-signing,
    • mis-leading,
    • more impostrous,
    • most astucious,
    • more rascal,
    • under-handed,
    • most illusory,
    • most feline,
    • un-trustworthy.

    deceptive (adjective)

    • seeming,
    • snide,
    • Imposturous.

    dishonest (adjective)

    • dissimulating,
    • Prevaricating,
    • misstating,
    • perfidious,
    • Equivocating,
    • misleading,
    • double-dealing,
    • untruthful,
    • committing perjury,
    • Inventing,
    • delusive,
    • wrong,
    • deceptive,
    • two-timing,
    • falsifying,
    • dissembling,
    • fibbing,
    • delusory,
    • guileful,
    • double-crossing,
    • untrue,
    • misrepresenting,
    • mendacious.

    double-dealing (adjective)

    • left handed,
    • most two-timing,
    • most twotiming,
    • most swindling,
    • more swindling,
    • more twotiming,
    • more two-timing,
    • most two timing,
    • more two timing,
    • doubledealing,
    • lefthanded.

    evasive (adjective)

    • casuistical,
    • casuistic,
    • Elusory,
    • sophistical.

    false (adjective)

    • cooked-up,
    • Forsworn,
    • Misrepresentative,
    • mythomaniac,
    • rascally,
    • off the mark,
    • scoundrelly,
    • contrary to fact,
    • inexact,
    • falsehearted.

    hypocritical (adjective)

    • jivier,
    • more smooth spoken,
    • more feigning,
    • un-natural,
    • most moralistic,
    • hypo critical,
    • most feigning,
    • pietistic,
    • more smoothspoken,
    • more smooth-spoken,
    • hypo-critical,
    • more moralistic,
    • self righteous,
    • most smoothspoken,
    • smoothtongued,
    • smoothspoken,
    • more caviling,
    • most smooth-spoken,
    • selfrighteous,
    • feigning,
    • smooth spoken,
    • most smooth spoken,
    • most caviling,
    • smooth tongued,
    • jiviest.

    insincere (adjective)

    • in sincere,
    • more put-on,
    • in-sincerer,
    • in sincerer,
    • more put on,
    • more puton,
    • dis simulating,
    • in-sincerest,
    • in sincerest,
    • in-sincere,
    • most dissimulating,
    • dis-simulating,
    • most put on,
    • most put-on,
    • more dissimulating,
    • puton,
    • insincere,
    • most puton.

    mala fide (adjective)

    • mala fide.

    Other relevant words: (adjective)

    • hypocritical,
    • deceitful,
    • false,
    • imprecise,
    • crooked,
    • pretended,
    • shifty,
    • commiting perjury,
    • trumped up,
    • smooth-spoken,
    • pharisaical,
    • moralistic,
    • Truthless,
    • roguish,
    • unloyal,
    • Impostrous,
    • prevaricative,
    • swearing falsely,
    • evasive,
    • out of line,
    • prevaricatory,
    • two-faced,
    • Astucious,
    • Double dealing,
    • jivey,
    • bearing false witness.

    pretended (adjective)

    • masked.

    resting (adjective)

    • supported by,
    • abed,
    • settled on,
    • located,
    • nonactive,
    • up on,
    • set on.

    roguish (adjective)

    • impish.

    sham (adjective)

    • dummier,
    • more imitation,
    • more plaster,
    • dummiest,
    • most plaster,
    • most imitation.

    shifty (adjective)

    • more contriving,
    • most dodging,
    • more dodging,
    • more unhonest,
    • un honest,
    • fly by night,
    • more prevaricative,
    • more conniving,
    • most contriving,
    • most prevaricatory,
    • most conniving,
    • most unhonest,
    • Unhonest,
    • most prevaricative,
    • more prevaricatory,
    • un-honest.

    trumped up (adjective)

    • made up,
    • de vised,
    • most fabricated,
    • in vented,
    • de-vised,
    • more devised,
    • most devised,
    • in-vented.

    two-faced (adjective)

    • twofaced,
    • two faced,
    • most backstabbing,
    • more backstabbing.

    untrue (adjective)

    • un truer,
    • un-true,
    • more unloyal,
    • un-loyal,
    • most unloyal,
    • in-constant,
    • un true,
    • un truest,
    • un loyal,
    • un-truer,
    • most imprecise,
    • un-truest,
    • out line.

    untruthful (adjective)

    • scheming,
    • devious.
  • n.

    • unreliable.

    • treacherous,
    • tricky,
    • unsound.

    act (noun)

    • fabrication,
    • lying,
    • prevarication.

    deception (noun)

    • cozenage,
    • fast one,
    • dupery,
    • hypocrisy,
    • beguilements,
    • boondoggle,
    • disinformation,
    • Defraudation,
    • cunnings,
    • boondoggles,
    • deceptiveness,
    • beguilement,
    • dissimulation,
    • hokum,
    • fraudulence.

    equivocation (noun)

    • coverup,
    • evasion,
    • runaround,
    • quibbling routine,
    • cover up,
    • shufflings,
    • double meaning,
    • tergiversation,
    • amphibology,
    • equivocality.

    libel (noun)

    • maliciou.

    mendacity (noun)

    • un truthfulnesses,
    • un truthfulness,
    • un-truthfulnesses,
    • un-truthfulness.

    Other relevant words: (noun)

    • Equivoque,
    • phoniness,
    • equivocation,
    • phonies,
    • libel,
    • deception,
    • vilification,
    • slicks,
    • traducement,
    • falsifications,
    • falsification,
    • SLIES,
    • mendacity.

    phoniness (noun)

    • backhandeds,
    • twofaceds,
    • perfidiou,
    • disingenuou,
    • un faithfuls,
    • dis-ingenuousnesses,
    • un-faithfuls,
    • deceptives,
    • deviou,
    • hypocriticals,
    • deceitfuls,
    • pretentiou,
    • evasives,
    • dis-ingenuousness,
    • dissimulatings,
    • un-trues,
    • mendaciou,
    • snides,
    • dissemblings,
    • falses,
    • faithlesses,
    • shifties,
    • ambidextrou,
    • untruthfuls,
    • two faceds,
    • duplicitou,
    • dis ingenuousness,
    • untrues,
    • two-faceds,
    • un trues,
    • dis ingenuousnesses,
    • unfaithfuls.

    prostrate (noun)

    • fallen,
    • dropped.
  • Other synonyms:

    • dishonest,
    • tying,
    • Dueling,
    • supine,
    • funneling,
    • Equaling.

    • prostrate,
    • prone.

    bragging

    • talk.

    deceit

    • dishonesty.

    misleading

    • sham.

    Other relevant words (noun):

    • insincerity,
    • depression,
    • borrow,
    • have,
    • misleadingly,
    • treacherously,
    • spread out,
    • deceitfully,
    • sanctimonious,
    • exist,
    • cunningly,
    • fallacious,
    • feigned,
    • Covin,
    • dodging,
    • exaggeration,
    • pseudo,
    • made-up,
    • Deceiving,
    • inactive,
    • dishonourable,
    • betray,
    • sanctimony,
    • duplicity,
    • lounging,
    • truthlessness,
    • fraud,
    • deceitfulness,
    • disgrace,
    • misinform,
    • forswearing,
    • faking,
    • low,
    • supposititious,
    • outspread,
    • belie,
    • put to bed,
    • unfair,
    • cheat,
    • disloyalty,
    • fabricated,
    • bear,
    • astutely,
    • mendaciously,
    • resupine,
    • dishonestly,
    • lowness,
    • corrupt,
    • sprawling,
    • spuriously,
    • perversion,
    • sly,
    • artificial,
    • Pseudology,
    • Fudging,
    • prostration,
    • squatness,
    • hold,
    • Unveracious,
    • duplicitous,
    • stretched out,
    • lay,
    • evasiveness,
    • formation,
    • dwell,
    • pretending,
    • charlatanism,
    • repose,
    • loll,
    • Discumbency,
    • Pecksniffian,
    • tartuffery,
    • disloyal,
    • fill,
    • misrepresentation,
    • fictitious,
    • construction,
    • sprawled,
    • horizontal,
    • leaning,
    • recumbent,
    • fraudulently,
    • groveling,
    • subjacent,
    • disingenuous,
    • delusion,
    • cheating,
    • machiavellian,
    • lolling,
    • liar,
    • fable,
    • Improbity,
    • faithlessness,
    • flat,
    • crafty,
    • counterfeit,
    • allegory,
    • lie,
    • artifice,
    • quackery,
    • Couchancy,
    • bring down,
    • infidelity,
    • wrongly,
    • unreal,
    • draped,
    • Decumbence,
    • meretricious,
    • slimy,
    • deceivingly,
    • obtain,
    • Recumbency,
    • Reposing,
    • equivocal,
    • ungenuine,
    • Time-serving,
    • designing,
    • take,
    • capriciously,
    • insincerely,
    • azimuth,
    • supination,
    • excuse,
    • fake,
    • lie down,
    • recline,
    • occupy,
    • Lawing,
    • janus-faced,
    • thievish,
    • fraudulent,
    • ambiguous,
    • fictionalization,
    • shrewdly,
    • being dishonest,
    • untrustworthy,
    • accept,
    • falsehood,
    • mythomania,
    • underhand,
    • Subreption,
    • delude,
    • fakery,
    • crawling,
    • unscrupulous,
    • catch,
    • subterfuge,
    • squat,
    • chicanery,
    • foxy,
    • Fabling,
    • untruthfulness,
    • pharisaic,
    • nether,
    • untruthfully,
    • Perjured,
    • reclining,
    • Jacent,
    • indeterminate,
    • unctuous,
    • dishonor,
    • bed down,
    • spurious,
    • idle,
    • nether most,
    • double-talk,
    • Stumpiness,
    • manufacture,
    • admit,
    • sneaky,
    • deceive,
    • quibbling,
    • unjustly,
    • false swearing,
    • thieving,
    • Hollowly,
    • deceptively,
    • untruth,
    • craftily,
    • chicane,
    • credibility gap,
    • cunning,
    • deviously,
    • artfully,
    • MALA FIDES,
    • decumbent,
    • shortness,
    • Couche,
    • crouched,
    • treachery,
    • Accubation,
    • incorrectly,
    • Decumbency,
    • perfidiously,
    • unfairly,
    • leaching,
    • trickily,
    • receive,
    • unprincipled,
    • debased,
    • two-facedness,
    • disrepute,
    • faithless,
    • bent,
    • lies,
    • mendaciousness,
    • assembly,
    • neap,
    • Pharisaism,
    • spread,
    • outstretched,
    • supineness,
    • bogus,
    • mislead,
    • deceit,
    • cheatingly,
    • wily,
    • lying down,
    • invention,
    • fibbery,
    • couchant,
    • adopt,
    • engross,
    • trickery,
    • Accumbency,
    • Reclination,
    • Resupination,
    • vulpine,
    • falsely,
    • betrayal,
    • sophistry,
    • carry,
    • squattiness,
    • falsity,
    • slippery,
    • pick,
    • forgery,
    • cram,
    • shiftily,
    • accumbent,
    • Charlatanry,
    • hypocritically,
    • insidiously,
    • perjury,
    • Concocted,
    • technical procumbent,
    • bad faith,
    • lay down,
    • debasement,
    • procumbent,
    • knavish,
    • spread eagle,
    • fiction,
    • sprawl,
    • Resting,
    • proneness,
    • sanctimoniousness,
    • guile,
    • falseness,
    • get,
    • Phariseeism,
    • underhanded,
    • artful,
    • unfaithfully.

How to use «Lying» in context?

Lying is a big part of life. We tell lies to protect ourselves, our loved ones, and our friends. It’s a way of life.

But sometimes lying is a bad idea. Lying can hurt our relationships and make things worse. Lying can make us feel bad about ourselves.

When it comes to lying, there are a few things to keep in mind. First, always be truthful to the people you’re lying to. Second, be careful about what you say. Third, be honest about the consequences of lying. And finally, be honest with yourself.

Paraphrases for Lying:

Paraphrases are highlighted according to their relevancy:
  • Equivalence

    • Noun, plural
      lies.
  • Independent

    • Adjective
      elongated.
    • Noun, plural
      falsehoods, fools, untruths, liars.
    • Noun, singular or mass
      falsehood, liar.
    • Verb, past tense
      elaborated, enlarged, expanded, extended, liar, spread, stole, Broadened, Widened, Punctuated.
    • Verb, gerund or present participle
      being, believing, belonging, beneath, bordering, broadening, burying, cheating, covering, crossing, dead, death, diverting, ducking, dumping, dying, encompassing, expanding, falling, fighting, find, flying, going, hiding, history, increasing, keeping, know, lagging, lasting, laying, lengthening, lit, living, looking, misleading, misreading, mistaking, not, opposing, pouring, raising, ranging, reaching, reclining, relaxing, retaining, riding, running, sitting, soothing, spreading, staging, standing, stay, stretching, suffering, thinking, travelling, underlying, underneath, waiting, watching, widening, wrong, Averaging, Awaiting, Deceiving, Drooling, Elevating, Enlarging, Everything, Expecting, Experiencing, Extending, Fooling, Forming, Hinging, Hoping, Instituting, Kidding, L, Occurring, Overthrowing, Referring, Relying, Residing, Resting, Reversing, Roosting, Consisting, Constituting, Spanning, Staying, Suggesting, exiting, guarding, fucking.
    • Verb, 3rd person singular present
      MENS.
  • Other Related

    • Adjective
      elongate.

Homophones for Lying:

  • longwise, limnos, lanchou, lemming, lanky, lansa, links, lammas, lanugo, luoyang, lionize, lank, linage, lining, linaceae, limosa, longish, line coach, leniency, lanius, lange, lounge, lallans, linkage, lunacy, lanchow, linguica, limning, lanseh, lens, lanzhou, lung, lowness, Lowliness, longyi, longways, lemnos, lioness, lungyi, luminesce, luminous, leeuwenhoek, lyons, luminance, linnaeus, lionise, lamaze, lemon cheese, lungi, linux, lemnaceae, lennoaceae, lemon juice, lineage, Lillian Gish, lingua, leaning, lime juice, lynch, lonas, Lyonnaise Sauce, low mass, linz, languish, liomys, lunge, lulling, leanness, limax, launch, long ago, loyang, ling, lilongwe, lummox, leuwenhoek, lance, link, Ling Ko, low-lying, loaning, lenience, lion monkey, laying, Lynx, Lamiaceae, lyonnais, lemniscus, lameness, lunch, lingo, language, leymus, lense, linac, Lamna Nasus, long, loins, long-ago, launce, lemmus, lyonnaise.

Hypernym for Lying:

  • n.

    • act
      paltering, fibbing.

Hyponym for Lying:

  • n.

    • act
      misrepresentation, falsification.

Table of Contents

Synonyms

Antonyms

Etymology

Rhymes with Lying

  • indemnifying
  • semidrying
  • retrying
  • decrying
  • undying
  • denying
  • defying
  • trying
  • spying
  • prying
  • frying
  • drying
  • crying
  • vying
  • tying
  • tieing
  • sighing
  • shying
  • dying
  • dyeing
  • buying
  • eyeing

How do you pronounce lying?

Pronounce lying as laɪɪŋ.

US — How to pronounce lying in American English

UK — How to pronounce lying in British English

How to spell lying? Is it lysing? Or lyeing? Common misspellings are:

  • lysing
  • lyeing

Sentences with lying

Quotes about lying

palter

Definition: to act insincerely or deceitfully

Palter began as a word meaning “to mumble indistinctly,” and evolved to mean “to act insincerely or deceitfully,” “to use trickery,” or “to equivocate” by the time that Shakespeare used it in Julius Caesar:

Romans, that have spoke the word, and will not palter.

Palter also can mean “to haggle” or “to bargain especially with the intent of delay or compromise,” but that meaning is even more rare today than the “to equivocate” meaning. Recently, researchers into political communications at Harvard have been using palter with a more specific meaning, according to the Harvard Gazette:

Paltering is when a communicator says truthful things and in the process knowingly leads the listener to a false conclusion. It has the same effect as lying, but it allows the communicator to say truthful things and, some of our studies suggest, feel like they’re not being as deceptive as liars.
–Todd Rogers, Harvard Kennedy School

Doing this takes skill and the kind of awareness of what constitutes incriminating speech normally associated with trial lawyers, but the payoff is avoiding the blunt lie. The article goes on to say, “Even if caught, they’re often judged by outside observers less harshly than if they had lied outright.”

The origin of palter is unclear. It could come from the obsolete verb pelt meaning “to bargain,” or it may be a distant relative of the obsolete noun paltry, meaning “something useless or worthless.” But if a plausible theory of the word’s origin were uncovered, should we believe it?

dissemble

Definition: to hide under a false appearance

Dissemble came to English from the French word dissimuler (“to hide,” “to conceal”), and ultimately from the Latin word dissimulare (“to conceal“ or “to disguise”). The word dissimule—much closer to the French spelling—was used in English until dissemble displaced it around 1600, possibly because of the influence of the unrelated word resemble.

The link to resemble resonates in Shakespeare: in Twelfth Night, the Bard used dissemble to mean “to disguise”—that is, “to not resemble”—when the Clown imitates a clergyman:

Well, I’ll put it on, and I will dissemble myself in’t; and I would I were the first that ever dissembled in such a gown.

In many contexts today, dissemble is used as a near-synonym of “to lie”:

He would have no reason to dissemble when he tells me that the dialect Sutton used to disparage para-cyclists is not remotely in the vocabulary of able-bodied rowers who share their Caversham base with Paralympians, as the cyclists do in the Manchester velodrome.
—Jonathan McEvoy, The Daily Mail, 30 April 2016

The first order of business is to support candidates in the 2016 election who are sane and plan to help, rather than continue to dissemble and obstruct.
—Tom Toles, The Washington Post, 22 April 2016

Resemble seems to haunt dissemble in a literal way: our evidence shows that dissemble is used where disassemble is intended with sufficient frequency to show that they are very easily confused.

prevaricate

Definition: to avoid telling the truth by not directly answering a question

If telling the truth is to stay on the straight and narrow, then to prevaricate is to take a crooked path. It comes from the Latin word varicare that literally means “to straddle,” derived from varus, meaning “bowlegged,” “bent,” or “knock-kneed.” In Latin, praevaricari was used to mean “to plough (a field) crookedly.” It also had a meaning used in Roman legal contexts that gave rise to our modern one: “to collude”–specifically, for an advocate to conspire with his opponent in order to conceal a crime or secure a particular outcome in a trial. The English word began life with the meaning “to transgress” religious or civil laws and “to go astray” (move crookedly) from rectitude. These meanings are now obsolete in English, but led to the modern meaning “to deviate from the truth” or “to speak equivocally or evasively,” or, to be perfectly blunt about it, “to lie.”

Like many legalistic long Latin-derived words, prevaricate contrasts with the monosyllabic Germanic word lie by adding subtle connotations of evading the truth rather than telling an outright falsehood—a lawyer’s trick.

Ordered, that Henry Smith, an Alderman of Drogheda, be taken into Custody of the Sergeant at Arms attending this House, for prevaricating in his Testimony this Day before the House.
The Post Man (London, Eng.), 24 Sept. 1717

mendacious

Definition: likely to tell lies

Probably the best fancy way to describe a liar is mendacious. Words derived from Latin give us greater intellectual and emotional distance, which makes them sound technical or legalistic, especially compared to monosyllabic Germanic words: think of interrogate (instead of ask) or perceive (instead of see) or cogitate (instead of think).

Mendacious comes from the Latin word mendax, meaning “lying” or “false.” It is often used to refer to people who habitually lie. Mendax is related to the Latin word for “fault,” menda, which is the root of amend and emend. The a- of amend and e- of emend come from the Latin prefix meaning “out,” so amend and emend literally mean “to remove fault» or «to correct.»

The noun mendacity can be used to mean «lack of honesty» or «lie.»

I am the way, the truth, and the life; and therefore require I sincerity (as Tully did) in counsaile, because pure and sincere veritie is to be respected, and mendacious and subtill lying, is earnestly to be auoided.
—Thomas Lodge, The diuel coniured, 1596

fib

Definition: a trivial or childish lie

Fib, like lie, is both a noun and a verb. It’s a less serious version of lie, often used when referring to children or inconsequential lies:

I fibbed about the price of dinner so they weren’t embarrassed.

The origins of fib aren’t known for certain. It’s possible that it comes from a shortening of fable, and there’s evidence of the fun word fible-fable (meaning “nonsense”) from the 1500s that could have led to fib. Fible-fable is an example of reduplication, like razzle-dazzle or super-duper, which connects fib to the way children naturally love to play with language.

”What everybody else means. You said you’d marry me.”

Mally gave a little shriek.

”Never! Good gracious, Roger, what a horrible fib!”
—Patricia Wentworth, Daily Boston Globe, 23 Jun. 1933

equivocate

Definition: to use unclear language especially to deceive or mislead someone

It looks like there’s equal in equivocate, and the first uses of this word meant “to have the same sound” or “to resemble closely,” and it came to have other meanings about the expression of ambiguity in language. For example, a now-obsolete meaning was “to use words that have a double meaning”; the related adjective equivocal originally meant “having two or more meanings,” and a contrasting word univocal, referred to words with just one meaning.

Today, equivocate means “to avoid committing to something” or “to use words that have more than one sense in order to say one thing while actually meaning another.” It is a word commonly used about politicians.

And lastly, perceiving that the doctrine of all that fide in the cases of conscience, making it lawfull for them to equivocate with their adversaries in their answeres….
—Edwin Sandys, A relation of the state of religion, 1605

perjury

Definition: to tell a lie under oath

To perjure yourself is to tell what is false when you are sworn to tell the truth. Perjure comes from French and traces back to the Latin word perjurare meaning “to swear falsely”: per- means “detrimentally,” or “for the worse,” and jurare means “to swear,” and is also the root of jury. Perjure is usually used with a reflexive pronoun such as oneself, himself, herself or themselves, as in “he perjured himself during the trial.” The crime of forcing another person to lie under oath is referred to as suborning perjury.

Two related words deserve mention when discussing perjure: abjure has the same -jure root that means “to swear,” and means “to renounce upon oath,” or, more broadly, “to reject.” And forswear comes from Old English roots that form a parallel of perjure. The two are exact synonyms when used with the meaning “to swear falsely,” but forswear is more commonly used in a different way, to mean “to promise to give up (something),” as in “He said he would forswear cigarettes.”

The Recorder, by advising such a Measure, so palpably ignorant and foolish, has shewn himself ignorant of a Point of Law known to every Attorney’s Clerk who has served only six Months; or else he wilfully perjured himself by giving knowingly false Counsel to the City.
Jackson’s Oxford Journal (Oxford, Eng.), 20 Oct. 1770

fact-fake block letters

Half-truths may occupy that delicate middle ground between verity and the thing you say when you can’t quite bring yourself to tell the truth. We offer two possible meanings for the word (“a statement that is only partially true” and “a statement that mingles truth and falsehood with deliberate intent to deceive”), so if one doesn’t quite work for you just say that you meant the other.

I Should do ill to print a half truth, whereof I pretend to be an intire lover.
— Theophilus Philanax Gerusiphilus Philalethes Decius, An Answer to the Lord George Digbies apology for himself, 1642 

shredded paper

Suppressio veri, which comes directly from New Latin, is defined as “suppression of the truth.” The term is primarily found in legal contexts, and not so very common in the United States (we label it Roman, civil, & Scots law). Suppressio veri is often contrasted with another legal import from New Latin, suggestio falsi, which is defined as “suggestion of an untruth; a false statement as opposed to suppression of the truth.”

It has long been a matter of public notoriety that our degraded administration were habitually guilty of that species of lying which, in the schools, is denominated supressio veri, the suppression of truth, a vice every way as criminal as the bold suggestion of falsehood, and much more mean and cowardly.
The Gleaner (Wilkes-Barre, PA), 24 Sept. 1813

liar photo

Sometimes one wishes to call someone else a teller of untruths, but would like to do so with a bit more emphasis, flair, and biblical undercurrents than may be found in the word liar. On such occasions one may employ Ananias. The word is generally capitalized, as it is the name of an early Christian who was struck dead for lying. It also, however, functions as a simple synonym for liar.

If you would prefer a fancy liar word without biblical reference you may instead go with pseudologist.

’Give you money!’ exclaimed the wife. ‘That’s bold as brass you be, axing for it. You pretend that you handed your money over to me, and I knows, by the way you fumbles wi’ something in your pocket, that you’re a keepin’ back of a part. You’re a veritable Ananias-Saphira, and’ll come to just the same bad end.’
The Cornhill Magazine (London, Eng.), Dec. 1900

illustration of person telling story with holes in it

A fabulist may refer to one of a number of people; “a creator or writer of fables especially that carry a moral lesson,” “a professional teller of tales” (a sense now obsolete), and “an inventor of falsehoods” (otherwise known as a liar). The first of these meanings is the oldest, dating in use back to the 16th century, and would be applied to such well-known figures as Aesop.

And any loyal subject who asserts the pure and patriotic motives of Mr. Pitt, and ventures to question the somewhat peculiar readings of history which Mr. Gladstone has determined to adopt upon Irish questions, must be prepared for twenty-five pages of unmitigated abuse, and to be branded before his fellow-men with the awful titles of “fabulist” and “historiaster”!
Western Mail (Cardiff, Wal.), 18 Nov. 1887

Table of Contents

  1. Which source would be best for locating the definition for the word vital?
  2. Which reference source is the best choice for finding the synonyms and antonyms of a word ?( 1 point?
  3. What is the synonym of fibbing?
  4. What is the meaning of fibbing?
  5. What is the difference between fibbing and lying?
  6. What’s the meaning of lie?
  7. What does squabbling mean?
  8. Does squabble mean argue?
  9. What is another word for squabble?
  10. What does devastated mean?
  11. Is devastated an emotion?
  12. What is another word for devastated?
  13. What is the best definition of devastating?
  14. What does cataclysmic mean in English?
  15. What does barrage mean?
  16. What is the root word of devastate?
  17. What is the difference between headworks and barrage?
  18. How much is a barrage?
  19. How many missiles can a barrage take?
  20. Do you get more money for using the barrage?
  21. What is the difference between Weir and barrage?
  22. What is the main difference between dam and weir?
  23. What is the purpose of a weir?
  24. What does Weir mean in English?
  25. Where does the name Weir come from?
  26. What is the meaning of examples?

SYNONYMS FOR lying 1 falsehood, falsity, mendacity, prevarication. 2 deceptive, misleading, mendacious, fallacious; sham, counterfeit.

Which source would be best for locating the definition for the word vital?

Due to this, if you want to locate the definition for the word “vital” or any other word the best is to use a dictionary and more specifically and English dictionary.

Which reference source is the best choice for finding the synonyms and antonyms of a word ?( 1 point?

The thesaurus

What is the synonym of fibbing?

In this page you can discover 9 synonyms, antonyms, idiomatic expressions, and related words for fibbing, like: paltering, prevaricating, lying, hedging, equivocating, misrepresenting, fabricating, forswearing and falsifying.

What is the meaning of fibbing?

a trivial act of lying

What is the difference between fibbing and lying?

A fib is a lie, but perhaps so small on the scale of untruths its weight and consequences are equally small. For example, a fib might be, “I loved that movie,” when in reality you would have poked your own eyes out just so you didn’t have to see another minute of it. A lie, on the other hand, feels heavier.

What’s the meaning of lie?

1 : to make an untrue statement with intent to deceive She was lying when she said she didn’t break the vase. He lied about his past experience. 2 : to create a false or misleading impression Statistics sometimes lie. 2 : something that misleads or deceives His show of remorse was a lie.

What does squabbling mean?

: a noisy altercation or quarrel usually over petty matters. squabble. verb. squabbled; squabbling/ ˈskwä-​b(ə-​)liŋ /

Does squabble mean argue?

To squabble is to argue or fight, especially over something silly. When two siblings fight over who gets to sit in the front seat of the car, this is an example of a time when they squabble.

What is another word for squabble?

Some common synonyms of squabble are altercation, quarrel, and wrangle.

What does devastated mean?

transitive verb. 1 : to bring to ruin or desolation by violent action a country devastated by war The typhoon devastated the island. 2 : to reduce to chaos, disorder, or helplessness : overwhelm devastated by grief Her wisecrack devastated the class.

Is devastated an emotion?

When there’s devastation, there’s terrible destruction. You can see the devastation from a violent hurricane and feel devastation over all the people that were injured. People can also feel devastation — it’s a kind of extreme sadness or state of feeling emotionally wrecked.

What is another word for devastated?

Devastated Synonyms – WordHippo Thesaurus….What is another word for devastated?

shattered distraught
distressed overcome
gutted overwhelmed
shocked crushed
stunned confounded

What is the best definition of devastating?

1 : causing great damage or harm a devastating flood/earthquake a devastating injury A devastating coastal tsunami could also result from a severe displacement of the San Andreas Fault.—

What does cataclysmic mean in English?

1 : flood, deluge. 2 : catastrophe sense 3a. 3 : a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition broadly : an event that brings great changes an international economic cataclysm.

What does barrage mean?

1 : a heavy and continuous firing of weapons during a battle. 2 : a great amount of something that comes quickly and continuously a barrage of commercials. More from Merriam-Webster on barrage. Thesaurus: All synonyms and antonyms for barrage.

What is the root word of devastate?

The root of the word is the Latin vastare which means to lay waste, which comes from vastus meaning desolate or empty.

What is the difference between headworks and barrage?

Headworks is a civil engineering term for any structure at the head or diversion point of a waterway. It is smaller than a barrage and is used to divert water from a river into a canal or from a large canal into a smaller canal.

How much is a barrage?

The Barrage can be purchased from Warstock Cache & Carry for $2,121,350 , and it can be stored in the Garage (Personal Vehicle) and Mobile Operations Center.

How many missiles can a barrage take?

For a lightweight ATV, the Barrage is surprisingly strong, requiring five rockets from a Rocket Launcher, about 12 missiles from a Homing Launcher and 12 shots from a Heavy Sniper Mk II with explosive rounds, making it an ideal choice for getaways or fighting off against most targets.

Do you get more money for using the barrage?

Chiliad. The one you don’t pick will be sold by Lester and he gives you some of the money. So if you pick the Barrage, the Khanjali will be sold and you get 100k when you spawn in freemode after the finale. If you choose the Khanjali, you get 50k.

What is the difference between Weir and barrage?

A weir is an impermeable barrier that is built across a river to raise the water level on the upstream side. On the other hand, a barrage involves adjustable gates installed over a dam to maintain the water surface at different levels and at different times.

What is the main difference between dam and weir?

Weirs differ from dams in one major way. First and foremost, in a weir the water from upstream runs over top of the weir itself, constantly overflowing. In a dam, water flows through spillways and penstocks instead of over top of the dam, which could actually cause damage and is known as overtopping.

What is the purpose of a weir?

Weirs are fixed barriers across a river or stream that force water to flow over their tops, where the height of the water above the weir can be used to calculate flow.

What does Weir mean in English?

divert its flow

Where does the name Weir come from?

Weir Clan History: The surname originates from Vere, after several place names to be found in Normandy and which derive from the coastal fishing stations set up by long ago Norse invaders. Ralph de Ver, who was with William the Lion at Alnwick in 1174, is the first of the surname to be recorded in Scotland.

What is the meaning of examples?

1 : one that serves as a pattern to be imitated or not to be imitated a good example. 2 : a punishment inflicted on someone as a warning to others also : an individual so punished. 3 : one that is representative of all of a group or type.

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