| 释义 | 
		Definition of truthiness in English: truthinessnoun ˈtruːθɪnəsˈtro͞oTHēnis mass nouninformal The quality of seeming or being felt to be true, even if not necessarily true.  Example sentencesExamples -  The idea that everybody wears these pins is classic Stephen Colbertian "truthiness" at work.
 -  So what about Alessandra Stanley's goof, replacing Stephen Colbert's sublimely silly truthiness with the pedestrian "trustiness"?
 -  To use the memorable phrase coined by comedian Stephen Colbert, Web 2.0 sites can all too easily supply "truthiness" rather than truth.
 -  It's not as great a made-up word as "truthiness," but I like it.
 -  Ideology, or to use Stephen Colbert's term, "truthiness" is ascendant.
 -  Yet the insights of science are often counterintuitive, frequently lacking "truthiness."
 -  They're rated for truthiness, and there are some fascinating stories.
 -  Ideology, or, to use Stephen Colberts term, truthiness, is ascendant, But the best antidote to that is critical reason, something Reedies have in abundance.
 -  Basically, we're looking at a case of representativeness - by analogy with truthiness - versus representation.
 -  Congress routinely adopts policies that cater to special interests, which are then justified by the sort of smarmy, fact-free spin that the comedian Stephen Colbert has labeled "truthiness."
 -  The truthiness hurts, doesn't it kids?
 -  The buzzword of the decade is Stephen Colbert's " truthiness ".
 -  But nearly all are freighted with a lack of truthiness.
 -  Truthiness, recently earned the word of the year award from the American Dialect Society after being popularized by Comedy Central's Stephen Colbert.
 -  It's easy to see how Stanley accidentally substituted trustiness for truthiness, since it anticipates Colbert's blowhard assertion, "I don't trust books."
 -  Doesn't surprise me one bit the "New York Times" hasn't heard of truthiness.
 -  For talk show hosts it's "truthiness" rather than truth that counts.
 -  Problem is, every time someone brings up those inconvenient facts, you respond with more truthiness.
 -  Jon Stewart is not alone in the truthiness business, as his pal Steven Colbert would put it.
 -  She speaks truthiness to power and doesn't even know the difference.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century (in the sense 'truthfulness'): coined in the modern sense by the US humorist Stephen Colbert.    Definition of truthiness in US English: truthinessnounˈtro͞oTHēnis informal The quality of seeming or being felt to be true, even if not necessarily true.  Example sentencesExamples -  The truthiness hurts, doesn't it kids?
 -  So what about Alessandra Stanley's goof, replacing Stephen Colbert's sublimely silly truthiness with the pedestrian "trustiness"?
 -  It's easy to see how Stanley accidentally substituted trustiness for truthiness, since it anticipates Colbert's blowhard assertion, "I don't trust books."
 -  Yet the insights of science are often counterintuitive, frequently lacking "truthiness."
 -  Doesn't surprise me one bit the "New York Times" hasn't heard of truthiness.
 -  Truthiness, recently earned the word of the year award from the American Dialect Society after being popularized by Comedy Central's Stephen Colbert.
 -  But nearly all are freighted with a lack of truthiness.
 -  Basically, we're looking at a case of representativeness - by analogy with truthiness - versus representation.
 -  Congress routinely adopts policies that cater to special interests, which are then justified by the sort of smarmy, fact-free spin that the comedian Stephen Colbert has labeled "truthiness."
 -  To use the memorable phrase coined by comedian Stephen Colbert, Web 2.0 sites can all too easily supply "truthiness" rather than truth.
 -  The buzzword of the decade is Stephen Colbert's " truthiness ".
 -  She speaks truthiness to power and doesn't even know the difference.
 -  They're rated for truthiness, and there are some fascinating stories.
 -  It's not as great a made-up word as "truthiness," but I like it.
 -  The idea that everybody wears these pins is classic Stephen Colbertian "truthiness" at work.
 -  Ideology, or, to use Stephen Colberts term, truthiness, is ascendant, But the best antidote to that is critical reason, something Reedies have in abundance.
 -  For talk show hosts it's "truthiness" rather than truth that counts.
 -  Problem is, every time someone brings up those inconvenient facts, you respond with more truthiness.
 -  Jon Stewart is not alone in the truthiness business, as his pal Steven Colbert would put it.
 -  Ideology, or to use Stephen Colbert's term, "truthiness" is ascendant.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century (in the sense ‘truthfulness’): coined in the modern sense by the US humorist Stephen Colbert.     |