fakeful

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From fake +‎ -ful.

Adjective[edit]

fakeful (comparative more fakeful, superlative most fakeful)

  1. (rare) Full of fakeness; disingenuous
    • 1906, Army-Navy-Air Force Register and Defense Times, volume 40, page 6:
      This last sparsely descriptive, but largely imaginative; not fact, but fiction, pure and fakeful, and of such a specious species as to effectually discourage and scare away intending raw recruits and cause the while full many a gullible and guileless reader to wonder overmuch just why in this good day of grace the poor seafaring main-behind-the-guns should have to live (and get fat) on meat so smeared and smirched with printer's ink.
    • 2013, John Pierce, "Mental Jesus":
      This is the most important part of Discipleship because the “proof is in the pudding!” And our “Fruit” will carry us out as being “faithful” or “fakeful!”