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Pretence   Listen
Pretence

noun
1.
A false or unsupportable quality.  Synonyms: pretense, pretension.
2.
An artful or simulated semblance.  Synonyms: guise, pretense, pretext.
3.
Pretending with intention to deceive.  Synonyms: dissembling, feigning, pretense.
4.
Imaginative intellectual play.  Synonyms: make-believe, pretense.
5.
The act of giving a false appearance.  Synonyms: feigning, pretending, pretense, simulation.



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"Pretence" Quotes from Famous Books



... effort to suppress vivisection"; I dare not so honour my mere wishes and prayers as to put them for a moment beside your noble acts; but, this I know, I would rather submit to the worst of the deaths, so far as pain goes, than have a single dog or cat tortured on the pretence of sparing me a twinge or two. I return the paper, because I shall be probably shut up here for the next week or more, and prevented from seeing my friends: whoever would refuse to sign would certainly not ...
— Great Testimony - against scientific cruelty • Stephen Coleridge

... Percival is most ungentlemanly; but I wont be protected. I'll not have my affairs interfered with by men on pretence of protecting me. I'm not your baby. If I interfered between you and a woman, you would soon tell me ...
— Misalliance • George Bernard Shaw

... Dom Galors is galloping after Isoult, let us turn to that unconscious lady who hides her limbs in a pair of ragged breeches, and her bloom under the grime of coal-dust. Her cloud of hair, long now and lustrous, out of all measure to her pretence, she was accustomed to shorten by doubling it under her cap. An odd fancy had taken her which prevented a second shearing. If Prosper loved her she dared not go unlovely any more. Her hair curtained her when she bathed in the brook and the sun. Beyond doubt it was beautiful; it was Prosper's; ...
— The Forest Lovers • Maurice Hewlett

... him as a lunatic. I submit that before we extol or abuse, our first duty is to understand. And we can no longer evade that duty. We cannot afford any longer to ignore or dismiss the most powerful force in Continental literature, on the vain pretence that the author was mad, as if the greatest French thinker of the eighteenth century, Rousseau, and the greatest thinker of the nineteenth century, Auguste Comte, had not fallen victims to the ...
— German Problems and Personalities • Charles Sarolea

... you must on no pretence Make the first observation. Wait for the Victim to commence: No Ghost of any common sense Begins ...
— Phantasmagoria and Other Poems • Lewis Carroll


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