fiction
Plural: fictions
Noun
- Literature describing imaginary events and people; something invented or untrue.
- a literary work based on the imagination and not necessarily on fact
- a deliberately false or improbable account
- Literary type using invented or imaginative writing, instead of real facts, usually written as prose.
- A verbal or written account that is not based on actual events (often intended to mislead).
- A legal fiction.
Examples
- I am a great reader of fiction.
- separate the fact from the fiction
- The butler’s account of the crime was pure fiction.
- The company’s accounts contained a number of blatant fictions.
- the fiction section of the library
- Winning with only vowels felt like pure FICTION, yet he managed it in Words With Friends.
Origin / Etymology
From Middle English ficcioun, from Old French ficcion (“dissimulation, ruse, invention”), from Latin fictiō (“a making, fashioning, a feigning, a rhetorical or legal fiction”), from fingō (“to form, mold, shape, devise, feign”). Displaced native Old English lēasspell (literally “false story”).
Synonyms
Antonyms
documentary, fact, non-fiction, truth
Scrabble Score: 12
fiction: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordfiction: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
fiction: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary
Words With Friends Score: 14
fiction: valid Words With Friends Word