false

[fawls] /fɔls/
adjective, falser, falsest.
1.
not true or correct; erroneous:
a false statement.
2.
uttering or declaring what is untrue:
a false witness.
3.
not faithful or loyal; treacherous:
a false friend.
4.
tending to deceive or mislead; deceptive:
a false impression.
5.
not genuine; counterfeit.
6.
based on mistaken, erroneous, or inconsistent impressions, ideas, or facts:
false pride.
7.
used as a substitute or supplement, especially temporarily:
false supports for a bridge.
8.
Biology. having a superficial resemblance to something that properly bears the name:
the false acacia.
9.
not properly, accurately, or honestly made, done, or adjusted:
a false balance.
10.
inaccurate in pitch, as a musical note.
adverb
11.
dishonestly; faithlessly; treacherously:
Did he speak false against me?
Idioms
12.
play someone false, to betray someone; be treacherous or faithless.
Origin
before 1000; Middle English, Old English fals < Latin falsus feigned, false, orig. past participle of fallere to deceive; reinforced by or reborrowed from Anglo-French, Old French fals, feminine false < Latin
Related forms
falsely, adverb
falseness, noun
half-false, adjective
quasi-false, adjective
quasi-falsely, adverb
Synonyms
1. mistaken, incorrect, wrong, untrue. 2. untruthful, lying, mendacious. 3. insincere, hypocritical, disingenuous, disloyal, unfaithful, inconstant, perfidious, traitorous. 4. misleading, fallacious. 5. artificial, spurious, bogus, forged. False, sham, counterfeit agree in referring to something that is not genuine. False is used mainly of imitations of concrete objects; it sometimes implies an intent to deceive: false teeth; false hair. Sham is rarely used of concrete objects and usually has the suggestion of intent to deceive: sham title; sham tears. Counterfeit always has the implication of cheating; it is used particularly of spurious imitation of coins, paper money, etc.
Examples from the web for false
  • News about false arrests, convictions and imprisonments.
  • Technology creates many hopes, some false and some realizable.
  • His thesis that many scientific papers come to false conclusions is not new.
  • Captured this image while a couple of false clown fish were inquisitive over my strobe lights.
  • Please dont judge a life by the false books and words society shows you.
  • We deposed the false queen and created a situation where the bees could make a new leader.
  • Wow your friends with a chemically goosed false egg.
  • When they checked phone records, they discovered multiple calls to the false witnesses, who confessed to the police.
  • The telescope's advocates say junking it now would be a false economy.
  • It is based on false premises presented as offensively as possible.
British Dictionary definitions for false

false

/fɔːls/
adjective
1.
not in accordance with the truth or facts
2.
irregular or invalid: a false start
3.
untruthful or lying: a false account
4.
not genuine, real, or natural; artificial; fake: false eyelashes
5.
being or intended to be misleading or deceptive: a false rumour
6.
disloyal or treacherous: a false friend
7.
based on mistaken or irrelevant ideas or facts: false pride, a false argument
8.
(prenominal) (esp of plants) superficially resembling the species specified: false hellebore
9.
serving to supplement or replace, often temporarily: a false keel
10.
(music)
  1. (of a note, interval, etc) out of tune
  2. (of the interval of a perfect fourth or fifth) decreased by a semitone
  3. (of a cadence) interrupted or imperfect
adverb
11.
in a false or dishonest manner (esp in the phrase play (someone) false)
Derived Forms
falsely, adverb
falseness, noun
Word Origin
Old English fals, from Latin falsus, from fallere to deceive
Word Origin and History for false
adj.

late 12c., from Old French fals, faus (12c., Modern French faux) "false, fake, incorrect, mistaken, treacherous, deceitful," from Latin falsus "deceived, erroneous, mistaken," past participle of fallere "deceive, disappoint," of uncertain origin (see fail).

Adopted into other Germanic languages (cf. German falsch, Dutch valsch, Danish falsk), though English is the only one in which the active sense of "deceitful" (a secondary sense in Latin) has predominated. False alarm recorded from 1570s. Related: Falsely; falseness.

false in Technology

A small, compiled extensible language with lambda abstractions by W. van Oortmerssen.
For Amiga (ftp://ftp.cso.uiuc.edu/pub/amiga/fish/ff885).
Idioms and Phrases with false