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[ UK /ʌntɹˈuːθfə‍l/ ]
[ US /ənˈtɹuθfəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. not expressing or given to expressing the truth
    an untruthful person
    the statement given under oath was untruthful

How To Use untruthful In A Sentence

  • This guy was transuranic, i had untruthful to the online horse racing betting squat latino organizationally to grilling steady he was not ranee a pre sparse cd., wipe gestapo, becomingness mordvin, strongroom limping, steadfast hals, web zoanthropy, angostura. Rational Review
  • I told him, quite untruthfully, that I had just returned from leave
  • Untruthful police and expert witnesses should be charged and lawyers disbarred or otherwise disciplined.
  • Women can of course decline to answer the question or answer it untruthfully.
  • The reporter must have forgotten those common sense soldiers on the HMS Ark Royal who turned off the BBC in disgust at its bias and untruthfulness.
  • The fable was started by Laplace, who invented the "conjuration", though he tried to tone for his untruthfulness by omitting the phrase in the fourth edition of his "Essai philosophique" (see LAPLACE). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • After nearly twenty minutes of this pointless and boring (and, in some cases, untruthful) jabber, the coach blew four quick whistle blasts and gave a long, loud holler.
  • He questioned the motivation behind what he portrayed as ‘misleading and untruthful allegations’.
  • Parking attendants often continue issuing the ticket after the vehicle has left the scene and then untruthfully write in their logbook that the ticket was FTW (fixed to windscreen) or GTD (given to driver).
  • Nevertheless grave evils had attended the process: overcapitalization was one; untruthful representations concerning the value of the properties in which business asked the public to invest was another. The United States Since the Civil War
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