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fiction
a polite fiction
A general untruth or falsehood that is accepted in place of the truth to maintain politeness, civility, or stability among a given social group. Our parents' marriage was just a polite fiction in our household up until my youngest sister was off to college. By the time the military junta overthrew the dictatorship, the promise of democratic rule was little more than a polite fiction among the citizens of the country.
Fact is stranger than fiction,
and Truth is stranger than fiction.Prov. Things that really happen are harder to believe or more amazing than stories that people invent. Did you see the story in the newspaper about the criminal who attacks people with a toenail clipper? Fact is stranger than fiction! Jill: I can't believe someone's paying 900 dollars for Tom's broken-down old car—it doesn't even run. Jane: Truth is stranger than fiction.
truth is stranger than fiction
Real life can be more remarkable than invented tales, as in In our two-month trip around the world we ran into long-lost relatives on three separate occasions, proving that truth is stranger than fiction . This expression may have been invented by Byron, who used it in Don Juan (1833).
Common Names:
Name | Gender | Pronounced | Usage |
Hannibal | | HAN-i-bəl (English) | Ancient Near Eastern (Latinized), History |
Pamila | | - | English (Rare) |
Angelos | | - | Greek |
Dorothy | | DAWR-ə-thee, DAWR-thee | English |
Isabella | | ee-zah-BEL-lah (Italian), iz-ə-BEL-ə (English) | Italian, German, English, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch, Romanian |
Ramon | | - | Catalan |