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[ UK /sˈuːdə‍ʊ/ ]
[ US /ˈsudoʊ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. (often used in combination) not genuine but having the appearance of
    a pseudo esthete
    pseudoclassic
NOUN
  1. a person who makes deceitful pretenses

How To Use pseudo In A Sentence

  • In 1949, "pseudo folksongs" were banned by Dalstroi, the Gulag mining camps in Kolyma. Not so secret: deal at the heart of UK-US intelligence
  • But yes, good of Prof. Adler, who I hope will be a little chary of Althousian pseudoreality in future. The Volokh Conspiracy » Taking the Washington Post to School
  • Most pseudocheirids have a strongly prehensile tail (weakly so in the great glider and rock ringtail).
  • Aragon's writings circulated anonymously or under pseudonyms.
  • As to the charge of ‘pseudo-intellectual revisionism’ I don't think this means much of anything beyond polysyllabic name-calling.
  • Foord reported that bastnasite has been found pseudomorphing allanite.
  • I guess the term for that is "social networking," but I remain more interested in the social than the networking, and blogging under a pseudonym six or eight times a month in a personal essayish vein isn't exactly the fast lane to fame and influence. Archive 2009-05-01
  • After posting a "sunny, bright, cozy loft" on the rental marketplace, the woman, who uses the pseudonym EJ, returned to find the apartment ransacked by a renter using the name "DJ Pattrson. ABC News: Top Stories
  • We use the fact that processed pseudogenes and functional genes are subject to different nucleotide-substitution patterns.
  • The Brushy Basin sediments contain numerous chalcedony pseudomorph-after-barite concretions that range to more than 30 cm in diameter.
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