Refine this word faster
Fictional
"Fictional" in a Sentence (17 examples)
That ugly butcher resembles that fictional monster.
Who's your favorite fictional character?
The Cheshire Cat is a fictional cat popularised by Lewis Carroll in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and known for its distinctive mischievous grin.
The factual world is often weirder than the fictional world.
We’ve got to retool our system so that modern families and modern businesses can thrive. And let me be clear, this is not about big government, or expanding some fictional welfare-and-food-stamp state, the 47 percent mooching off the government. It is accounting for the realities of how people live now, today -- the necessities of a 21st century economy.
Sherlock Holmes is a fictional character.
All events and persons in the following program are fictional. Any similarity to real events or persons is purely coincidental.
The fact that you made up an entire fictional language all by yourselves is absolutely incredible!
Let's invent a fictional emergency and then make a lot of money off the taxpayers.
The dragon is a fictional creature.
Show 7 more sentences
Romeo and Juliet are fictional characters.
The janitor's account of the crime turned out to be entirely fictional.
Nineteen Eighty-Four was written in 1949. Its nightmarish fictional world is now 37 years in the past, so one might reasonably conclude that Orwell was far too pessimistic, but his great book was less a prediction than a warning, and above all an analysis of the totalitarian mentality.
The Simpsons is a fictional television show.
Including both factual and fictional books would have reduced the value of the study; it would have made the content too heterogeneous for the drawing of significant conclusions.
While the jury saw the Sopranos episode in which Adriana was killed for cooperating with the FBI, Mr. Ferro argued to the jury the difference between the fictional TV show from the reality of this trial.
Tunnels often feature in fictional journeys, so I will end with quotations from a fairly recent novel, Howard Spring's "Fame is the Spur", published in 1940, in which there is a journey from Manchester to Bradford via the Calder Valley route: "Ay, we're going through Todmorden. We'll soon be in t' tunnel, and when we get to t' other end we'll be in Yorkshire," and "Ah think this is t' filthiest tunnel in t' world."
See also for "fictional"
Next best steps
Mini challenge
Unscramble this word: fictional