释义
[ pri-tend ] SHOW IPA
/ prɪˈtɛnd / PHONETIC RESPELLING
SEE SYNONYMS FOR pretend ON THESAURUS.COM
verb (used with object) to cause or attempt to cause (what is not so) to seem so: to pretend illness; to pretend that nothing is wrong.
to appear falsely, as to deceive; feign: to pretend to go to sleep.
to make believe: The children pretended to be cowboys.
to presume; venture: I can't pretend to say what went wrong.
to allege or profess, especially insincerely or falsely: He pretended to have no knowledge of her whereabouts.
SEE MORE SEE LESS verb (used without object) to make believe.
to lay claim to (usually followed by to ): She pretended to the throne.
to make pretensions (usually followed by to ): He pretends to great knowledge.
Obsolete . to aspire, as a suitor or candidate (followed by to ).
SEE MORE SEE LESS adjective Informal . make-believe; simulated; counterfeit: pretend diamonds.
Origin of pretend First recorded in 1325–75; Middle English pretenden, from Latin praetendere “to stretch forth, put forward, pretend.” See pre-, tend1
SYNONYMS FOR pretend 1 simulate, fake, sham, counterfeit.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR pretend ON THESAURUS.COM
synonym study for pretend 1 . Pretend, affect, assume, feign imply an attempt to create a false appearance. To pretend is to create an imaginary characteristic or to play a part: to pretend sorrow. To affect is to make a consciously artificial show of having qualities that one thinks would look well and impress others: to affect shyness. To assume is to take on or put on a specific outward appearance, often (but not always) with intent to deceive: to assume an air of indifference. To feign implies using ingenuity in pretense, and some degree of imitation of appearance or characteristics: to feign surprise.
WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH pretend portend, pretend Words nearby pretend pretarsal, pretarsus, pretax, preteen, pretence, pretend , pretended, pretender, pretense, pretension, pretensive
Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020
Example sentences from the Web for pretend For Kirke it was being paid to pretend to play the oboe that heightened her affair with classical music.
‘Mozart in the Jungle’: Inside Amazon’s Brave New World of Sex, Drugs, and Classical Music | Kevin Fallon| December 23, 2014| DAILY BEAST
The irony has thinned with the economy, perhaps: Who can really afford just to pretend to DIY today?
Glenn Beck Is Now Selling Hipster Clothes. Really. | Ana Marie Cox| December 20, 2014| DAILY BEAST
Quickly, the lines between their pretend feelings for each other and their real ones are blurred.
Team Peeta or Team Gale: Why the ‘Hunger Games’ Love Triangle Ruins ‘Mockingjay – Part 1’ | Kevin Fallon| November 28, 2014| DAILY BEAST
Or: “Jazz: Just pretend you like it, that's what everyone else is doing.”
What’s With This Uncool Surge in Jazz Bashing? | Ted Gioia| November 2, 2014| DAILY BEAST
So just pretend that stuff never happens, would you, ladies?
Renee Zellweger’s Fine, But We Need Some Work: The Toxic Pursuit of ‘Effortless’ Beauty | Amanda Marcotte| October 22, 2014| DAILY BEAST
He might pretend to cynicism to hide his deep pleasure in it; none the less, he was moved profoundly.
Mavericks | William MacLeod Raine
I cannot pretend to discuss the subject fully in a mere note, even if I were otherwise competent to do it.
The Christian Life | Thomas Arnold
I'd never pretend to be what I was not—I didn't ever pretend to have what I didn't have.
The Broken Gate | Emerson Hough
He does not pretend to be just, while he is committing, or winking at, the most intolerable injustices.
God and Mr. Wells | William Archer
He could pretend that he had mistaken it for his own caravan or had got on to it by mistake or—or anything.
More William | Richmal Crompton
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British Dictionary definitions for pretend verb (when tr, usually takes a clause as object or an infinitive) to claim or allege (something untrue)
(tr; may take a clause as object or an infinitive) to make believe, as in a play you pretend to be Ophelia
(intr foll by to ) to present a claim, esp a dubious one to pretend to the throne
(intr foll by to ) obsolete to aspire as a candidate or suitor (for)
adjective fanciful; make-believe; simulated a pretend gun
Word Origin for pretend C14: from Latin praetendere to stretch forth, feign, from prae in front + tendere to stretch
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Words related to pretend fool, feign, purport, assume, impersonate, bluff, profess, put on, imitate, suppose, claim, cheat, fish, whitewash, dupe, beguile, allege, counterfeit, fudge, sham