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faker
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /ˈfeɪkɚ/
Audio (Southern England): (file) - Rhymes: -eɪkə(ɹ)
Noun
faker (plural fakers)
- One who fakes something.
- An impostor or impersonator.
- 1917, Upton Sinclair, The Profits of Religion […] :
- The ordinary Christian will read the claims of the New Thought fakers with contempt; but have I not shown the Catholic Church publishing long lists of money-miracles?
- 2001 June 23, Sonic Team USA, Sonic Adventure 2, Sega, published 2001:
- Sonic: I found you, faker!
- (military, by extension) A friendly unit (usually aircraft) that acts as a hostile unit in a military exercise.
- 2011, APP-6C: NATO Joint Military Symbology, page 555:
- faker: A friendly track acting as a hostile for exercise purposes. (STANAG 1241)
- (obsolete) A thief.
- (obsolete) A peddler of petty things.
- 1859, Snowden's Magistrates Assistant, page 497:
- He has been lagged for beaker hunting, was a mushroom faker [umbrella seller], has been on the steel for snamming a wedge sneezer; […]
- A snake oil salesman; one who makes exaggerated claims about a product he sells.
- 1906, Clifton Rodman Wooldridge, The Grafters of America: Who They are and how They Work, page 248:
- Yet the faker is not an unpopular visitor to the country fair. On the contrary, a country fair at which was not heard the stentorian shouts of the faker to "come on, boys; here's the chance to make your fortune," would be considered a dismal failure.
- 1909 May, G. Frank Lydston, “Honor to Whom Honor is Due”, in The Medical Standard, volume 32, page 248:
- All the doctor has to do nowadays is to read the labels on the bottles and boxes of samples the faker brings him.
- 1912 June, Locomotive Engineers Journal, volume 46, number 6, page 535:
- Business interests citizens against the food adulterator are severely hampered and injured and the "patent-medicine” faker.
Derived terms
Translations
one who fakes
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See also
Adjective
faker
- comparative form of fake: more fake.
- 2016, Laura Stampler, Little Black Dresses, Little White Lies, page 147:
- The name sounds faker than fake.
- 2018, Jessica Brody, Better You Than Me, page 7:
- He returns my smile, although his is probably faker than mine.
- 2022, Amanda Elliot, Sadie on a Plate, page 155:
- She's faker than the plastic food in the pictures on the McDonald's menu.
Anagrams
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French
Etymology
Pronunciation
Verb
faker
- (transitive, North America, colloquial) to fake; to feign (to pretend to do something)
Conjugation
Conjugation of faker (see also Appendix:French verbs)
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