[
UK
/mɛndˈeɪʃəs/
]
[ US /mɛnˈdeɪʃəs/ ]
[ US /mɛnˈdeɪʃəs/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
intentionally untrue
a mendacious statement -
given to lying
a mendacious child
How To Use mendacious In A Sentence
- There is no provision about the legal responsibility of celebrity advertising mendacious ads in our country.
- The bigger the unit you deal with, the hollower, the more brutal, the more mendacious is the life displayed. Familiar Letters of William James II
- There is no provision about the legal responsibility of celebrity advertising mendacious ads in our country.
- Along the way he correctly spelled stratocracy, refractoriness, mendacious, and childrens. John Seery: NEWSFLASH: Al Gore Awarded MacArthur "Genius" Grant!
- It is because the argument has been had and they have comprehensively lost it - because every one of their arguments is either bogus, mendacious or plain demonstrably wrong.
- It is time for the world to realize that the roots of the conflict are deep and complex not by any means as mendaciously portrayed by Israeli politicians as a war against Hamas. An American Expat View an Arab Christian Statement on Gaza
- By the way - though I imagine you were merely trying to denigrate others and be oh so cute - the word is "mendacious" … not "mendoucheous", which isn't even phonetically correct. Patterico's Pontifications
- Everything will be done,’ he told a colleague from the newspaper mendaciously.
- He has lied about his school and college results and his credit cards have more bounce than Beyoncé, so this mendacious chap needs to mend his ways.
- It was this scheme that Vice President Dick Cheney and then National Security Director Condi Rice were mendaciously citing when they referred ominously to a mushroom cloud threat in the fall of 2002, and that Bush lyingly referred to in his 2003 State of the Union message, when he said: "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa. Commemorating 9-11 by Impeaching the President