confess |
to reveal, admit, or concede as true, esp. something self-incriminating. [1/6 definitions] |
confirm |
to prove or verify; show to be true or correct. [1/4 definitions] |
contradictory |
in logic, either of two propositions that are related in a way that makes neither true and neither false. [1/3 definitions] |
could |
used to express ability or possibility in the present or in the future under the condition that something else were to happen or were true. [1/4 definitions] |
crab1 |
any of various other crustaceans resembling a true crab, such as a hermit or horseshoe crab. [1/8 definitions] |
credence |
acceptance (of a statement or the like) as valid or true. [1/2 definitions] |
cutis |
in vertebrates, the true skin, including the dermis and the epidermis. |
cypress |
any of several trees unrelated to but resembling true cypresses, such as the bald cypress of the redwood family. [1/2 definitions] |
daresay |
to take the risk of saying (used to introduce a statement of what one imagines to be true; used only in the first person singular in the present tense). |
declination |
the horizontal angle between magnetic north and true north at any given point on the earth's surface. [1/5 definitions] |
denial |
a state of unwillingness to mentally or emotionally accept that which is in fact true. [1/5 definitions] |
derma1 |
skin, esp. the true, living skin found beneath the epidermis; dermis. |
detect |
to discover the true or essential character of. [1/2 definitions] |
disavow |
to deny as being true. [1/3 definitions] |
dissemble |
to disguise or hide behind a false semblance; conceal the true nature or state of. [2/3 definitions] |
dissimulate |
to hide or disguise the true nature of; dissemble. [2 definitions] |
establish |
to determine or prove to the satisfaction of others; show to be true or valid. [1/3 definitions] |
evasive |
acting in a way that avoids giving a true and complete response. [1/2 definitions] |
fable |
to describe or recount as though true. [1/4 definitions] |
fact |
something known or proved to be true, or established in law to be true. [1/4 definitions] |
factoid |
a false or half-true statement or idea, often accepted as fact because of wide circulation and frequent repetition, as in print and electronic media. |