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Simulated   /sˈɪmjəlˌeɪtɪd/   Listen
Simulated

adjective
1.
Not genuine or real; being an imitation of the genuine article.  Synonyms: fake, false, faux, imitation.  "Faux pearls" , "False teeth" , "Decorated with imitation palm leaves" , "A purse of simulated alligator hide"
2.
Reproduced or made to resemble; imitative in character.



Simulate

verb
(past & past part. simulated; pres. part. simulating)
1.
Reproduce someone's behavior or looks.  Synonyms: copy, imitate.  "Children often copy their parents or older siblings"
2.
Create a representation or model of.  Synonym: model.
3.
Make a pretence of.  Synonyms: assume, feign, sham.  "He feigned sleep"



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"Simulated" Quotes from Famous Books



... chafe miserably under the strain of waiting and deception; the novelty had worn off for the wife of Roxbury; she was despairingly in love, and she was pining for the day to come when she could laugh again with real instead of simulated joyousness. ...
— The Husbands of Edith • George Barr McCutcheon

... give the least possible sign of their presence to the hostile sentinels, the French blasters advanced in a long line, at first with comparative rapidity, only stiffening into the grotesque rigidity of simulated death when the searchlights played upon them, and resuming progress when the beam shifted. Then as they approached the barrier they moved slowly and more slowly. When they arrived within forty yards the movement of the ...
— America's War for Humanity • Thomas Herbert Russell

... to get steerage-way, even if, in a nature like his, with those electric streamers of whim and fancy forever wavering across the vault of his brain, the needle of judgment would point in one direction long enough to strike a course by. The scheme of simulated insanity is precisely the one he would have been likely to hit upon, because it enabled him to follow his own bent, and to drift with an apparent purpose, postponing decisive action by the very means he adopts to arrive at its accomplishment, ...
— Among My Books - First Series • James Russell Lowell

... catch mice, but it is not known to attack squirrels. The bird certainly could not have strangled the chipmunk, and I am curious to know what would have been the result had he overtaken him. Probably it was only a kind of brag on his part—a bold dash where no risk was run. He simulated the hawk, the squirrel's real enemy, and ...
— Squirrels and Other Fur-Bearers • John Burroughs

... overalls before they touched the ground. If he had been inclined to corpulency, his frame was ample to build upon for a man of Websterian proportions, but he was not so inclined; on the contrary, he simulated other great men in his personality—Jackson, or our modern Abraham Lincoln. He was spare, bony, nervous. His heavy eyebrows, his dark hair well sprinkled with gray, which arose straight upward from his high, indented forehead, and his large, half ...
— Brook Farm • John Thomas Codman


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