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LIE |
False statement |
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UNTRUISM |
Something not true; a false statement. |
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RELIEF |
Aid umpire to cover up false statement |
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SLANDERING |
Making a false spoken statement damaging a person reputation |
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MENDACIOUS |
False; counterfeit; containing falsehood; as, a
mendacious statement. |
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DISPROOF |
A proving to be false or erroneous; confutation;
refutation; as, to offer evidence in disproof of a statement. |
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FALSE |
Not according with truth or reality; not true; fitted
or likely to deceive or disappoint; as, a false statement. |
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BEGUILE |
To delude by guile, artifice, or craft; to deceive or
impose on, as by a false statement; to lure. |
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FALSISM |
That which is evidently false; an assertion or statement
the falsity of which is plainly apparent; -- opposed to truism. |
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MISREPRESENTATION |
Untrue representation; false or incorrect
statement or account; -- usually unfavorable to the thing represented;
as, a misrepresentation of a person's motives. |
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OATH |
An appeal (in verification of a statement made) to a superior
sanction, in such a form as exposes the party making the appeal to an
indictment for perjury if the statement be false. |
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PERJURY |
At common law, a willfully false statement in a fact
material to the issue, made by a witness under oath in a competent
judicial proceeding. By... |
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FACT |
The assertion or statement of a thing done or existing;
sometimes, even when false, improperly put, by a transfer of meaning,
for the thing don... |
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HONEST |
...ere; free from fraud, guile, or
duplicity; not false; -- said of persons and acts, and of things to
which a moral quality is imputed; as, an hon... |