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Word Meanings - MAKE-BELIEF - Book Publishers vocabulary database

A feigning to believe; make believe. J. H. Newman.

Related words: (words related to MAKE-BELIEF)

  • FEIGNED
    Not real or genuine; pretended; counterfeit; insincere; false. "A feigned friend." Shak. Give ear unto my prayer, that goeth not out of feigned lips. Ps. xvii. 1. -- Feign"ed*ly, adv. -- Feign"ed*ness, n. Her treacherous sister Judah hath not turned
  • BELIEVE
    To exercise belief in; to credit upon the authority or testimony of another; to be persuaded of the truth of, upon evidence furnished by reasons, arguments, and deductions of the mind, or by circumstances other than personal knowledge; to regard
  • BELIEVER
    One who gives credit to the truth of the Scriptures, as a revelation from God; a Christian; -- in a more restricted sense, one who receives Christ as his Savior, and accepts the way of salvation unfolded in the gospel. Thou didst open the Kingdom
  • FEIGNING
    That feigns; insincere; not genuine; false. -- Feign"ing*ly, adv.
  • FEIGNER
    One who feigns or pretends.
  • FEIGN
    figura figure,and E. dough. See Dough, and cf. Figure, Faint, Effigy, 1. To give a mental existence to, as to something not real or actual; to imagine; to invent; hence, to pretend; to form and relate as if true. There are no such things done as
  • UNBELIEVER
    1. One who does not believe; an incredulous person; a doubter; a skeptic. 2. A disbeliever; especially, one who does not believe that the Bible is a divine revelation, and holds that Christ was neither a divine nor a supernatural person;
  • UNFEIGNED
    Not feigned; not counterfeit; not hypocritical; real; sincere; genuine; as, unfeigned piety; unfeigned love to man. "Good faith unfeigned." Chaucer. -- Un*feign"ed*ly, adv. -- Un*feign"ed*ness, n.
  • MISBELIEVE
    To believe erroneously, or in a false religion. "That misbelieving Moor." Shak.
  • UNBELIEVED
    Not believed; disbelieved.
  • MAKE-BELIEVE
    A feigning to believe, as in the play of children; a mere pretense; a fiction; an invention. "Childlike make-believe." Tylor. To forswear self-delusion and make-believe. M. Arnold.
  • DISBELIEVER
    One who disbelieves, or refuses belief; an unbeliever. Specifically, one who does not believe the Christian religion. I. Watts.
  • MISFEIGN
    To feign with an evil design. Spenser.
  • MISBELIEVER
    One who believes wrongly; one who holds a false religion. Shak.
  • DISBELIEVE
    Not to believe; to refuse belief or credence to; to hold not to be true or actual. Assertions for which there is abundant positive evidence are often disbelieved, on account of what is called their improbability or impossibility. J. S. Mill.

 

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