Fiction

  • 121fiction — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. fabrication, falsehood; romance, myth, hypothesis. See description. Ant., fact. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [Something invented or feigned] Syn. fabrication, untruth, invention; see fantasy 2 , lie 1 . 2.… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 122Fiction — Fic|tion 〈 [fı̣kʃn] f.; Gen.: ; Pl.: unz.〉 erzählende Literatur, Prosaliteratur, Belletristik; Ggs.: Nonfiction; →a. s. Faction [Etym.: engl.] …

    Lexikalische Deutsches Wörterbuch

  • 123fiction — fic·tion || fɪkʃn n. imaginative narrative which has no basis in fact (i.e. novel); category of literature including works of imaginative narratives; made up story; act of creating with the imagination …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 124fiction — 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

  • 125fiction — fic·tion …

    English syllables

  • 126fiction — s (oböj. LITT skönlitteratur …

    Clue 9 Svensk Ordbok

  • 127fiction —   Ka ao, mo olelo haku wale …

    English-Hawaiian dictionary

  • 128Topic outline of fiction — Fiction, a form of entertainment, is the art of story telling, an imaginative form of narrative, one of the four basic rhetorical modes. Although the word fiction is derived from the Latin fingere , to form, create , works of fiction need not be… …

    Wikipedia