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Pretend   /pritˈɛnd/   Listen
Pretend

verb
(past & past part. pretended; pres. part. pretending)
1.
Make believe with the intent to deceive.  Synonyms: affect, dissemble, feign, sham.  "He shammed a headache"
2.
Behave unnaturally or affectedly.  Synonyms: act, dissemble.
3.
Put forward a claim and assert right or possession of.
4.
Put forward, of a guess, in spite of possible refutation.  Synonyms: guess, hazard, venture.  "I cannot pretend to say that you are wrong"
5.
Represent fictitiously, as in a play, or pretend to be or act like.  Synonyms: make, make believe.
6.
State insincerely.  Synonym: profess.  "She pretended not to have known the suicide bomber" , "She pretends to be an expert on wine"
adjective
1.
Imagined as in a play.  Synonym: make-believe.  "Play money" , "Dangling their legs in the water to catch pretend fish"
noun
1.
The enactment of a pretense.  Synonym: make-believe.



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"Pretend" Quotes from Famous Books



... next week," she wrote, "though what possible benefit can accrue from our returning I cannot pretend to say. Either home is distasteful to me; so is the rest of the world; so are the people in it. Enviable condition, is it not? I seem to be afflicted with a sort of dreadful mental indigestion. Everything ...
— An Algonquin Maiden - A Romance of the Early Days of Upper Canada • G. Mercer Adam

... very distinctly. "I've got a tip for you. Pretend that you want to make something like the gadget that stops winds and warms places. ...
— Long Ago, Far Away • William Fitzgerald Jenkins AKA Murray Leinster

... as they pretend to sleep, are crazy for their coffee," she smiled, "but they've got to wait, like people at a circus do, till the animals are fed. The older folks get, the earlier they go to bed and the earlier they rise. Heaven only knows where it will end. If ...
— Dixie Hart • Will N. Harben

... prosecuting attorney, there was always some son, son-in-law or nephew, fitted by domestic training, by a technical apprenticeship, by moral adaptation, not only to perform the duties of the office, but to be contented in it, pretend to nothing beyond it, not to look above himself with regret or envy, satisfied with the society around him, and feel, moreover, that elsewhere he would be out ...
— The Origins of Contemporary France, Volume 5 (of 6) - The Modern Regime, Volume 1 (of 2)(Napoleon I.) • Hippolyte A. Taine

... fact that the voyager learns to take an exquisite, but quite rational, delight in the mere act of eating. I know that I ought to speak as though dinner were an ignoble institution; I know that the young lady who said, "Thanks—I rarely eat," represented a class who pretend to devote themselves to higher joys; but I decline to talk cant on any terms, and I say that the healthy, hearty hunger bestowed by the open sea is one of ...
— The Ethics of Drink and Other Social Questions - Joints In Our Social Armour • James Runciman


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