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单词 truth
释义

truth


truth

T0393300 (tro͞oth) n. pl. truths (tro͞othz, tro͞oths) 1. a. Conformity to fact or actuality: Does this story have any truth? b. Reality; actuality: In truth, he was not qualified for the job. c. The reality of a situation: The truth is, she respects your work. 2. a. A statement proven to be or accepted as true: truths about nature. b. Such statements considered as a group: researchers in pursuit of truth. 3. Sincerity; integrity: the truth of his intentions. 4. Fidelity to an original or standard: the truth of the copy. 5. a. Theology & Philosophy That which is considered to be the ultimate ground of reality. b. Logic The positive (true) truth-value.
[Middle English trewthe, loyalty, from Old English trēowth; see deru- in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.] Synonyms: truth, veracity, verity, verisimilitude
These nouns refer to the quality of being in accord with fact or reality. Truth is a comprehensive term that in all of its nuances implies accuracy and honesty: "We seek the truth, and will endure the consequences" (Charles Seymour).
Veracity is adherence to the truth: "Veracity is the heart of morality" (Thomas H. Huxley).
Verity often applies to an enduring or repeatedly demonstrated truth: "beliefs that were accepted as eternal verities" (James Harvey Robinson).
Verisimilitude is the quality of having the appearance of truth or reality: "merely corroborative detail, intended to give artistic verisimilitude to an otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative" (W.S. Gilbert).

truth

(truːθ) n1. the quality of being true, genuine, actual, or factual: the truth of his statement was attested. 2. something that is true as opposed to false: you did not tell me the truth. 3. a proven or verified principle or statement; fact: the truths of astronomy. 4. (usually plural) a system of concepts purporting to represent some aspect of the world: the truths of ancient religions. 5. fidelity to a required standard or law6. faithful reproduction or portrayal: the truth of a portrait. 7. an obvious fact; truism; platitude8. honesty, reliability, or veracity: the truth of her nature. 9. accuracy, as in the setting, adjustment, or position of something, such as a mechanical instrument10. the state or quality of being faithful; allegiance[Old English triewth; related to Old High German gitriuwida fidelity, Old Norse tryggr true] ˈtruthless adj

truth

(truθ)

n., pl. truths (tro̅o̅tz, tro̅o̅ths). 1. the true or actual state of a matter: to tell the truth. 2. conformity with fact or reality; verity: to check the truth of a statement. 3. a verified or indisputable fact, proposition, principle, or the like: mathematical truths. 4. the state or character of being true. 5. actuality or actual existence. 6. an obvious or accepted fact; truism; platitude. 7. honesty; integrity; truthfulness. 8. (often cap.) ideal or fundamental reality apart from and transcending perceived experience. 9. agreement with a standard or original. 10. accuracy, as of position or adjustment. 11. Archaic. fidelity or constancy. Idioms: in truth, in reality; in fact; actually. [before 900; Middle English treuthe, Old English trēowth. See true, -th1] truth′less, adj.

Truth

(truθ)

n. Sojourner (Isabella Van Wagener), 1797?–1883, U.S. abolitionist and women's-rights advocate, born a slave.

Truth

 

See Also: CANDOR, HONESTY

  1. All the durable truths that have come into the world within historic times have been opposed as bitterly as if they were so many waves of smallpox —H. L. Mencken
  2. As with the pursuit of happiness, the pursuit of truth is itself gratifying whereas the consummation often turns out to be elusive —Richard Hofstadter
  3. Honest as the skin between his brows —William Shakespeare
  4. Plain truths, like plain dishes, are commended by everybody, and everybody leaves them whole —Walter Savage Landor
  5. Pure truth, like pure gold, has been found unfit for circulation, because men have discovered that it is far more convenient to adulterate the truth than to refine themselves —Charles Caleb Colton
  6. Random truths are all I find stuck like burrs about my mind —Phyllis McGinley
  7. Rich honesty dwells like a miser … in a poor house; as your pearl in your foul oyster —William Shakespeare
  8. Speaking the truth is like writing well, and only comes with practice —John Ruskin

    This has been modernized from “The truth is like writing”

  9. Truth … drag it out and beat it like a carpet —Hortense Calisher
  10. Truth is a cow which will yield such people no more milk, and so they are gone to milk the bull —Samuel Johnson
  11. Truth is as difficult to lay hold on as air —Walter Savage Landor

    See Also: ELUSIVENESS

  12. Truth is as old as God —Emily Dickinson
  13. The truth is cold, as a giant’s knee will seem cold —John Ashbery
  14. Truth is impossible to be soiled by any outward touch as the sunbeam —John Milton
  15. Truth … is not a thing to be thrown about loosely, like small change; it is something to be cherished and hoarded and disbursed only when absolutely necessary —H. L. Mencken
  16. The truth is tough. It will not break, like a bubble, at a touch … you may kick it about all day, like a football, and it will be round and full at evening —Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.
  17. The truth kept wandering in and out of her mind like a lost child, never pausing long enough to be identified —Margaret Millar
  18. Truth, like a bird, is ever poised for flight at man’s approach —Jean Brown
  19. Truth, like a gentle shower, soaks through the ears and moistens the intellect —Anon
  20. Truth, like a point or line, requires an acuteness and intention to its discovery —Joseph Glanville
  21. Truth, like a suit of armor, stubbornly resists all attempts to penetrate it —Robert Traver

    In his novel, People Versus Kirk, Traver continues the simile with “… while the lie, under probing, almost invariably reveals some chinks and cracks.”

  22. Truth is like a torch, the more it is shook, the more it shines —Sir William Hamilton

    Modernized from “The more ’tis shook, it shines.”

  23. Truth, like gold, is not less so for being newly brought out of the mine —John Locke
  24. Truth, like light, blinds —Albert Camus

    Camus prefaces his simile from The Fall as follows: “Sometimes it is easier to see clearly into the liar than into the man who tells the truth.”

  25. Truth, like the juice of the poppy, in small quantities, calms men; in larger, heats and irritates them, and is attended by fatal consequences in its excess —Walter Savage Landor
  26. Truth’s like a fire, and will burn through and be seen —Maxwell Anderson
  27. A truth’s prosperity is like a jest’s; it lies in the ear of him that hears it —Samuel Butler
  28. The way of truth is like a great highway. It is not hard to find —Mencius
Thesaurus
Noun1.truth - a fact that has been verifiedtruth - a fact that has been verified; "at last he knew the truth"; "the truth is that he didn't want to do it"fact - a piece of information about circumstances that exist or events that have occurred; "first you must collect all the facts of the case"home truth - an important truth that is unpleasant to acknowledge (as about yourself)verity - an enduring or necessary ethical or religious or aesthetic truth
2.truth - conformity to reality or actuality; "they debated the truth of the proposition"; "the situation brought home to us the blunt truth of the military threat"; "he was famous for the truth of his portraits"; "he turned to religion in his search for eternal verities"the true, trueness, verityactuality - the state of actually existing objectively; "a hope that progressed from possibility to actuality"falseness, falsity - the state of being false or untrue; "argument could not determine its truth or falsity"
3.truth - a true statementtruth - a true statement; "he told the truth"; "he thought of answering with the truth but he knew they wouldn't believe it"true statementstatement - a message that is stated or declared; a communication (oral or written) setting forth particulars or facts etc; "according to his statement he was in London on that day"gospel truth, gospel - an unquestionable truth; "his word was gospel"tautology - (logic) a statement that is necessarily true; "the statement `he is brave or he is not brave' is a tautology"truism - an obvious truthfalsehood, untruth, falsity - a false statement
4.truth - the quality of being near to the true valuetruth - the quality of being near to the true value; "he was beginning to doubt the accuracy of his compass"; "the lawyer questioned the truth of my account"accuracyquality - an essential and distinguishing attribute of something or someone; "the quality of mercy is not strained"--Shakespeareexactitude, exactness - the quality of being exact; "he demanded exactness in all details"; "a man of great exactitude"fidelity - accuracy with which an electronic system reproduces the sound or image of its input signal
5.truth - United States abolitionist and feminist who was freed from slavery and became a leading advocate of the abolition of slavery and for the rights of women (1797-1883)Truth - United States abolitionist and feminist who was freed from slavery and became a leading advocate of the abolition of slavery and for the rights of women (1797-1883)Sojourner Truth

truth

noun1. reality, fact(s), real life, actuality Is it possible to separate truth from fiction?
reality unreality, lie, legend, fiction, myth, invention, delusion, fabrication, make-believe, falsehood, untruth, old wives' tale
2. truthfulness, fact, accuracy, honesty, precision, validity, legitimacy, authenticity, correctness, sincerity, verity, candour, veracity, rightness, genuineness, exactness, factuality, factualness There is no truth in this story.
truthfulness error, inaccuracy, falsity
3. fact, law, reality, certainty, maxim, verity, axiom, truism, proven principle It's a universal truth that we all die eventually.4. the fact of the matter, what really happened, gospel truth, God's truth, the honest truth, the case I must tell you the truth about this.5. honesty, principle, honour, virtue, integrity, goodness, righteousness, candour, frankness, probity, rectitude, incorruptibility, uprightness His mission is to uphold truth, justice and the American way.
honesty deception, deceit, dishonestyin truth actually, really, in fact, in reality, as a matter of fact, to tell the truth, in actual fact, in point of fact, if truth be told In truth, we were both unhappy.
Related words
adjectives veritable, veracious
Quotations
"Truth sits upon the lips of dying men" [Matthew Arnold Sohrab and Rustum]
"Beauty and Truth, though never found, are worthy to be sought" [Robert Williams Buchanan To David in Heaven]
"`Beauty is truth, truth beauty,' - that is all"
"Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know"
"That is all" [John Keats Ode on a Grecian Urn]
"What is truth? said jesting Pilate; and would not stay for an answer" [Francis Bacon Essays]
"Truth can never be told so as to be understood, and not believed" [William Blake Proverbs of Hell]
"Truth never hurts the teller" [Robert Browning Fifine at the Fair]
"Truth is within ourselves" [Robert Browning Paracelsus]
"'Tis strange - but true; for truth is always strange;"
"Stranger than fiction" [Lord Byron Don Juan]
"I maintain that Truth is a pathless land, and you cannot approach it by any path whatsoever, by any religion, by any sect" [Jiddu Krishnamurti speech]
"It is the customary fate of new truths to begin as heresies and to end as superstitions" [T.H. Huxley Science and Culture]
"The first casualty when war comes is truth" [Philander Chase Johnson Shooting Stars]
"There was things that he stretched, but mainly he told the truth" [Mark Twain The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn]
"The truth is rarely pure, and never simple" [Oscar Wilde The Importance of Being Earnest]
"The truth is a terrible weapon of aggression. It is possible to lie, and even to murder, for the truth" [Alfred Adler The Problem of Neurosis]
"The truth which makes men free is for the most part the truth which men prefer not to hear" [Herbert Agar A Time for Greatness]
"When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth" [Sir Arthur Conan Doyle The Sign of Four]
"The truth shall make you free" Bible: St. John
"When you want to fool the world, tell the truth" [Otto von Bismarck]
"It is always the best policy to speak the truth, unless of course you are an exceptionally good liar" [Jerome K. Jerome]
"Irrationally held truths may be more harmful than reasoned errors" [T.H. Huxley Science and Culture and Other Essays]
"Truth is the cry of all, but the game of the few" [Bishop George Berkeley Siris]
"Truth lies within a little and certain compass, but error is immense" [Henry St. John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke Reflections upon Exile]
Proverbs
"There is truth in wine (in vino veritas)"

truth

noun1. Correspondence with fact or truth:accuracy, correctness, exactitude, exactness, fidelity, veraciousness, veracity, veridicality, verity.2. Freedom from deceit or falseness:truthfulness, veracity.3. The quality of being actual or factual:actuality, fact, factuality, factualness, reality.
Translations
真理真相真实性

truth

(truːθ) plural truths (truːθz truːθs) noun1. trueness; the state of being true. I am certain of the truth of his story; `What is truth?' asked the philosopher. 真實性,真理 真实性,真理 2. the true facts. I don't know, and that's the truth; Tell the truth about it. 真相 真相ˈtruthful adjective (negative untruthful). 1. (of a person) telling the truth. She's a truthful child. 誠實的 诚实的2. true. a truthful account of what happened. 真實的 真实的ˈtruthfully adverb 誠實地 诚实地ˈtruthfulness noun 誠實 诚实tell the truth to confess or make a true statement. 說實話 说实话to tell the truth really; actually. To tell the truth I forgot it was your birthday last week. 老實講(說) 老实讲(说)

truth

真理zhCN

truth


See:
  • (if the) truth be known
  • (if the) truth be told
  • a home truth
  • a kernel of truth
  • a/the liar is not believed when he tells the truth
  • ain't it the truth
  • Ain't it the truth?
  • be economical with the truth
  • bend the truth
  • Children and fools tell the truth
  • economical with the truth
  • Fact is stranger than fiction
  • fact of the matter, the
  • God's honest truth
  • gospel truth
  • grain of truth
  • Half the truth is often a whole lie
  • home truth
  • Honest to goodness
  • if the truth were known
  • if truth be known/told
  • if truth be told
  • in truth
  • Is there any truth to (something)?
  • Is there any truth to?
  • liar is not believed when he tells the truth
  • moment of truth
  • moment of truth, the
  • naked truth
  • nothing could be further from (something)
  • nothing could be further from my mind, the truth, etc.
  • nugget of truth
  • ring of truth, the
  • stretch the truth
  • take (something) as (the) gospel truth
  • take (something) as gospel
  • take (something) for (the) gospel truth
  • take something as gospel
  • take something as/for gospel/gospel truth
  • tell the truth
  • Tell the truth and shame the devil
  • the fact of the matter
  • the fact/truth of the matter
  • the gospel truth
  • the greater the truth, the greater the libel
  • the honest truth
  • the moment of truth
  • the naked truth
  • the truth of the matter
  • the truth will out
  • the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth
  • there is truth in wine
  • there's no truth to (something)
  • to tell (you) the truth
  • to tell the truth
  • truth is stranger than fiction
  • truth to tell
  • truth will out
  • Truth, justice, and the American Way
  • unvarnished truth
  • unvarnished truth, the

truth


truth

[trüth] (geology) top

truth

that which corresponds to the facts, e.g. in PHILOSOPHY, the correspondence theory of truth. Strictly interpreted, in which true propositions or ideas ‘picture’ or ‘represent’ the world, this is an ‘empiricist’ notion (see EMPIRICISM). However, this conception of truth has been challenged recently, e.g. by ‘post-empiricist’ conceptions of science (see KUHN, FEYERABEND, POST-EMPIRICISM, POSTSTRUCTURALISM, THEORY-RELATIVITY). Since both hypotheses and the ‘facts’ which ‘test’ these are ‘theory-relative’, ‘truth’ cannot be established simply by recourse to empiricist procedures such as VERIFICATION or FALSIFICATION.

Alternative bases of truth-claims include the consensus theory of truth, in which ‘truth’ is a matter of social (including scientific) agreements on reality, reached in a context of ‘open’discourse (see HABERMAS). Questions of correspondence with reality remain central, but cannot be settled in the way which empiricists suggest. See also DECONSTRUCTION, DERRIDA.

Truth

 

an accurate reflection of objective reality in the consciousness of man; the reproduction of reality as it exists in itself, outside of and independent of man and his consciousness. The conception of truth as a correspondence between knowledge and things dates back to the thinkers of antiquity. Thus, Aristotle wrote, “He who thinks the separated [in reality; ed.] to be separated and the combined to be combined has the truth” (Metaphysics, IX, 10, 1051b. 9; Russian translation, Moscow-Leningrad, 1934). This tradition in the interpretation of truth was continued in the philosophy of modern times, represented by F. Bacon, B. Spinoza, C. Helvétius, D. Diderot, P. Holbach, M. V. Lomonosov, A. I. Herzen, N. G. Chernyshevskii, and L. Feuerbach.

In idealist systems truth is viewed either as an eternally immutable and absolute property of ideal objects (Plato, St. Augustine) or as the agreement of thinking with itself, with its a priori forms (I. Kant). Beginning with J. Fichte, German classical idealism introduced a dialectical approach into the interpretation of truth. According to G. Hegel, truth is the process of the development of knowledge.

The exponents of existentialism, following the Danish thinker S. Kierkegaard, interpret truth in a subjective-idealist fashion as a form of the psychological state of the individual.

Adherents of subjective-idealist empiricism view truth as the correspondence; between thought and the subject’s sensations (D. Hume, B. Russell), as the correspondence between ideas and the individual’s attempts to attain success (pragmatism), or as the simplest, most “economical” mutual adjustment of sensations (E. Mach, R. Avenarius). Neopositivists consider truth to be the agreement between scientific propositions and sense experience. Conventionalism (J. H. Poincaré, R. Carnap) proceeds from the premise that the definition and content of truth are of a conventional nature.

According to dialectical materialism, those representations, concepts, ideas, and theories are true which adequately and accurately reflect what exists in objective reality. V. I. Lenin identifies as objective truth that content of human ideas “that does not depend on a subject, that does not depend either on a human being or on humanity” (Poln. sobr. soch., 5th ed., vol. 18, p. 123).

Science is not a storehouse of ready-made and exhaustive truths but the process of their attainment, the movement from limited and approximate knowledge to ever more universal, profound, and exact knowledge. This process is infinite.

Truth is relative insofar as it reflects the object not fully but within certain limits, conditions, and relationships, which are constantly changing and developing. Each step of cognition is limited by the historical conditions of society and by the level of practice. And in this sense truth is the “child of the age.” In comparison with the preceding theory each successive scientific theory represents more complete and profound knowledge. The previous theory is interpreted within the new theory as a relative truth and therefore as a special case of a more comprehensive and more precise theory, for example, the classical mechanics of I. Newton and the theory of relativity of A. Einstein. Such a correlation between theories in their historical development has been referred to in science as the principle of correspondence. Dialectical materialism “recognizes the relativity of all of our knowledge, not in the sense of denying objective truth but in the sense that the limits of approximation of our knowledge to this truth are historically conditional” (ibid., 5th ed., vol. 18, p. 139). The absolutizing of relative truth and the eternalizing of truth give rise to error and dogmatic thinking.

Every relative truth, insofar as it is objective, contains a “particle” of absolute knowledge. Absolute truth is knowledge that fully exhausts its subject matter and cannot be refuted during the further development of cognition. Mankind is moving along a path of mastering absolute truth, which in this sense is made up of the sum of relative truths. “Human thought,” wrote Lenin, “by its nature is capable of giving, and does give, absolute truth, which is compounded of a sum total of relative truths. Each step in the development of science adds new grains to the sum of absolute truth, but the limits of the truth of each scientific proposition are relative, now expanding, now shrinking with the growth of knowledge” (ibid., 5th ed., vol. 18, p. 137).

One of the fundamental principles of the dialectical approach to cognition is the recognition of the concrete nature of truth. This presupposes, first of all, precise consideration of all the conditions in which the object of cognition is found and identification of the primary and essential properties, links, and tendencies of its development. The principle of the concrete nature of truth necessitates approaching the facts not with general formulas and schemata but taking into account real conditions and the concrete situation. Lenin noted that “any truth, if ‘overdone’ …, if exaggerated, or if carried beyond the limits of its actual applicability, can be reduced to an absurdity, and is even bound to become an absurdity under these conditions” (ibid., 5th ed., vol. 41, p. 46). The criterion of truth is found not in thought in itself and not in the reality outside the subject. K. Marx wrote that “the question whether objective thought can be attributed to human thinking is not a question of theory but is a practical question. In practice man must prove the truth, that is, the reality and power, the this-sidedness of his thinking. The dispute over the reality or nonreality of thinking which is isolated from practice is a purely scholastic question” (K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch., 2nd ed., vol. 3, pp. 1–2). In our consciousness, that which has been directly or indirectly confirmed in practice or that which can be implemented in practice is correct and objective. If man compares his concept of things with other concepts that have already been verified in practice, he thereby mediatedly compares his concept with the object itself. The correspondence between a concept and an object is fully proved only when man succeeds in finding, reproducing, or creating an object that corresponds to the concept which he has formed.

Problems connected with the theoretical and social conditions for attaining truth are worked out in the theory of knowledge and the sociology of knowledge.

A. G. SPIRKIN

Truth


TRUTH. The actual state of things.
2. In contracts, the parties are bound to toll the truth in their dealings, and a deviation from it will generally avoid the contract; Newl. on Contr. 352-3; 2 Burr. 1011; 3 Campb. 285; and even concealment, or suppressio veri, will be considered fraudulent in the contract of insurance. 1 Marsh. on Ins. 464; Peake's N. P. C. 115; 3 Campb. 154, 506.
3. In giving his testimony, a witness is required to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth; for the object in the examination of matters of fact, is to ascertain truth.
4. When a defendant is sued civilly for slander or a libel, he may justify by giving the truth in evidence; but when a criminal prosecution is instituted by the commonwealth for a libel, he cannot generally justify by giving the truth in evidence.
5. The constitutions of several of the United States have made special provisions in favor of giving the truth in evidence in prosecutions for libels, under particular circumstances. In the constitutions of Pennsylvania, Delaware, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, it is declared, that in publications for libels on men in respect to their public official conduct, the truth may be given in evidence, when the matter published was proper for public information. The constitution of New York declares, that in all prosecutions or indictments for libels, the truth may be given in evidence to the jury; and if it shall appear to the jury that the matter charged as libelous, is true, and was published with good motives and for justifiable ends, the party shall be acquitted. By constitutional provision in Mississippi and Missouri, and by legislative enactment in New Jersey, Arkansas, Tennessee, Act of 1805, c. 6: and Vermont, Rev. Stat. tit. 11, c. 25, s. 68; the right to give the truth in evidence has been more extended; it applies to all prosecutions or indictments for libels, without any qualifications annexed in restraint of the privilege. Cooke on Def. 61.

TRUTH


AcronymDefinition
TRUTHTime-Critical Rescheduling Using Truth Maintenance
TRUTHTransparency and Responsibility for United States Trade Health (Act)
TRUTHTaking Real Understanding to Heart
TRUTHTrust, Respect, Unity at the Hall (student group; Seton Hall University; South Orange, NJ)

truth


  • all
  • noun
  • phrase

Synonyms for truth

noun reality

Synonyms

  • reality
  • fact(s)
  • real life
  • actuality

Antonyms

  • unreality
  • lie
  • legend
  • fiction
  • myth
  • invention
  • delusion
  • fabrication
  • make-believe
  • falsehood
  • untruth
  • old wives' tale

noun truthfulness

Synonyms

  • truthfulness
  • fact
  • accuracy
  • honesty
  • precision
  • validity
  • legitimacy
  • authenticity
  • correctness
  • sincerity
  • verity
  • candour
  • veracity
  • rightness
  • genuineness
  • exactness
  • factuality
  • factualness

Antonyms

  • error
  • inaccuracy
  • falsity

noun fact

Synonyms

  • fact
  • law
  • reality
  • certainty
  • maxim
  • verity
  • axiom
  • truism
  • proven principle

noun the fact of the matter

Synonyms

  • the fact of the matter
  • what really happened
  • gospel truth
  • God's truth
  • the honest truth
  • the case

noun honesty

Synonyms

  • honesty
  • principle
  • honour
  • virtue
  • integrity
  • goodness
  • righteousness
  • candour
  • frankness
  • probity
  • rectitude
  • incorruptibility
  • uprightness

Antonyms

  • deception
  • deceit
  • dishonesty

phrase in truth

Synonyms

  • actually
  • really
  • in fact
  • in reality
  • as a matter of fact
  • to tell the truth
  • in actual fact
  • in point of fact
  • if truth be told

Synonyms for truth

noun correspondence with fact or truth

Synonyms

  • accuracy
  • correctness
  • exactitude
  • exactness
  • fidelity
  • veraciousness
  • veracity
  • veridicality
  • verity

noun freedom from deceit or falseness

Synonyms

  • truthfulness
  • veracity

noun the quality of being actual or factual

Synonyms

  • actuality
  • fact
  • factuality
  • factualness
  • reality

Synonyms for truth

noun a fact that has been verified

Related Words

  • fact
  • home truth
  • verity

noun conformity to reality or actuality

Synonyms

  • the true
  • trueness
  • verity

Related Words

  • actuality

Antonyms

  • falseness
  • falsity

noun a true statement

Synonyms

  • true statement

Related Words

  • statement
  • gospel truth
  • gospel
  • tautology
  • truism

Antonyms

  • falsehood
  • untruth
  • falsity

noun the quality of being near to the true value

Synonyms

  • accuracy

Related Words

  • quality
  • exactitude
  • exactness
  • fidelity

noun United States abolitionist and feminist who was freed from slavery and became a leading advocate of the abolition of slavery and for the rights of women (1797-1883)

Synonyms

  • Sojourner Truth
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