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Fictional   /fˈɪkʃənəl/   Listen
Fictional

adjective
1.
Related to or involving literary fiction.  "A fictional treatment of the train robbery"  Antonym: nonfictional.
2.
Formed or conceived by the imagination.  Synonyms: fabricated, fancied, fictitious.  "A fancied wrong" , "A fictional character"



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"Fictional" Quotes from Famous Books



... the hardihood to set aside the romantic pirate of fictional tradition and paint a genuine historic pirate; lustful, murderous, brutal, relentless. The story has force and ...
— Around the World with Josiah Allen's Wife • Marietta Holley

... produced from The Science-Fictional Sherlock Holmes, 1960. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this ...
— The Return • H. Beam Piper and John J. McGuire

... Hengist's and Horsa's landing, has elements which are fictional rather than historical—a. Thus "when we find Hengist and Horsa approaching the coasts of Kent in three keels, and Aelli effecting a landing in Sussex with the same number, we are reminded of the Gothic tradition which carries a migration of Ostrogoths,[4] Visigoths, and Gepidae, ...
— A Handbook of the English Language • Robert Gordon Latham

... His life is a perpetual evasion. Miracle, chimera and to-morrow keep him alive. He lives on fiction and myth. It is the Lie that makes him free. Animals alone are given the privilege of lifting the veil of Isis; men dare not. The animal, awake, has no fictional escape from the Real because he has no imagination. Man, awake, is compelled to seek a perpetual escape into Hope, Belief, Fable, Art, God, Socialism, Immortality, Alcohol, Love. From Medusa-Truth he makes an appeal ...
— The Mutiny of the Elsinore • Jack London

... philosophy, art—and the stylistic expression of such beliefs—formal verse satire and epistle, mock-poem, heroic or Hudibrastic couplet, diction of polite conversation, ironic metaphysical conceits, fantastic fictional situations—become irrelevant to the satirist writing when the past seems lost. In his later works, Pope took Augustan satire about as far as it could go. The Epilogue to the Satires becomes an epilogue to all Augustan satire and the conclusion of The New Dunciad declares ...
— The Methodist - A Poem • Evan Lloyd


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