fıctıonal

listen to the pronunciation of fıctıonal
Englisch - Türkisch
hayali
fiction
kurgu

Kurgu peri masalları ve mitler kadar eski. - Fiction is as old as fairy tales and myths.

O gerçeği kurgudan ayıramaz. - He can't tell fact from fiction.

fiction
roman

O gerçekten bilim kurgu romanlarını çok sever. - He really likes science fiction novels a lot.

Tom kurgu roman okumayı seviyor. - Tom likes to read fiction.

fiction
{i} hayâl ürünü roman
fiction
{i} hayâl ürünü şey
fiction
kurmaca

Kurmaca ile ilgili sorun çok fazla mantıklı olmasıdır. Gerçek hiç mantıklı gelmez. - The trouble with fiction... is that it makes too much sense. Reality never makes sense.

fiction
hikayeci
fiction
muhayyelat
fiction
fiksiyon
fiction
(Kanun) mevhume
fiction
roman ve hikaye edebiyatı
fiction
hayal ürünü
fiction
uyduruk
fiction
hayal
fiction
hikaye

O hikâye gerçek mi yoksa kurgu mu? - Is that story fact or fiction?

Kayıp prensin hikayesi bir kurgu idi. - The story of the lost prince was a fiction.

fiction
uydurma
fiction
düş

O, bilim kurguya çok düşkündür. - He's very fond of science fiction.

fiction
icat
fiction
kurmaca yazın
fiction
düş ürünü yapıt
fiction
hayali fictionalize f roman şekline sokmak fictionist i roma
fiction
{i} roman ve hikâye edebiyatı
fiction
kolaylık olsun diye hakikat gibi farzolunan şey fictional s roman ede biyatına ait
fiction
uydurma hikâye
fiction
{i} huk. kolaylık olsun diye gerçek gibi farzolunan şey, mevhume
fiction
kurgusal edebiyat
fiction
{i} masal

Kurgu peri masalları ve mitler kadar eski. - Fiction is as old as fairy tales and myths.

fiction
yapıntı
Englisch - Englisch

Definition von fıctıonal im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch

fiction
{n} a story invented, tale, device, lie, falsehood
fiction
a literary work based on the imagination and not necessarily on fact
fiction
Literature in which the radical of presentation is the printed or written word, such as novels and essays
fiction
{i} imaginative narrative which has no basis in fact (i.e. novel); category of literature including works of imaginative narratives; made-up story; act of creating with the imagination
fiction
An invented, non-factual work of literature
fiction
or Legal Fiction a rule assuming as true something that is clearly false A fiction is often used to avoid rules that Parliament should change So, for example if a body has no power to sit beyond midnight but has several hours more of work still to do, it is easier to turn back the clock on their wall from time to time than it is to change their constitution When the High Court had a full workload of civil cases the criminal division of the same court, could help out and take on some cases by pretending that the defendant in a simple civil action had been arrested and was in custody The fiction that a corporation is, a person separate from its members is equivalent to saying that the law deals with the group as a unit, disregarding for the group's individual members
fiction
prose writing that tells about imaginary characters and events
fiction
generic term for something invented by the imagination
fiction
An imaginative or invented literary work that is not based on facts See also non-fiction
fiction
Imaginary, invented writings, such as novels and short stories
fiction
Fictitious literature; comprehensively, all works of imagination; specifically, novels and romances
fiction
a deliberately false or improbable account
fiction
Literary type using invented or imaginative writing, instead of real facts, usually written as prose
fiction
Imaginative literature, such as novels and short stories, featuring made-up characters font In printing, a complete set of type of one style form The way in which a text is put together; how it is organized formal In speech or writing, a style that is serious and correct
fiction
Invention
fiction
Fiction refers to books and stories about imaginary people and events, rather than books about real people or events. Immigrant tales have always been popular themes in fiction Diana is a writer of historical fiction. see also science fiction
fiction
The act of feigning, inventing, or imagining; as, by a mere fiction of the mind
fiction
A statement or account that is fiction is not true. The truth or fiction of this story has never been truly determined. truth, fact
fiction
An invented work, created from the imagination A work not presented as fact, though it may be based on a true story or situation
fiction
Any like assumption made for convenience, as for passing more rapidly over what is not disputed, and arriving at points really at issue
fiction
If something is a fiction, it is not true, although people sometimes pretend that it is true. The idea that the United States could harmoniously accommodate all was a fiction. fact
fiction
That which is feigned, invented, or imagined; especially, a feigned or invented story, whether oral or written
fiction
an invented story
fiction
stories about imaginary people and events
fiction
is an imaginative narrative in any form of presentation that is designed to entertain, rather than explain, argue, or merely describe; specifically a type of literature, especially prose, novels, short stories, plays, and narrative poetry
fiction
An invented work created from the imagination A work not presented as fact, though it may be based on a true story or situation
fiction
An assumption of a possible thing as a fact, irrespective of the question of its truth
fiction
Imaginative narrative that is designed to entertain
fiction
Hence: A story told in order to deceive; a fabrication; opposed to fact, or reality
fiction
Fi
fıctıonal

    Silbentrennung

    fic·tion·al

    Türkische aussprache

    fîkşınıl

    Aussprache

    /ˈfəksʜənəl/ /ˈfɪkʃənəl/

    Etymologie

    [ 'fik-sh&n ] (noun.) 14th century. fiction +‎ -al
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