fals
Old French
adj
Definitions
- false untrue, not factual, wrong
Etymology
Inherited from Latin falsus (false, deceived, counterfeit, falsehood, mistaken).
Origin
Latin
falsus
Gloss
false, deceived, counterfeit, falsehood, mistaken
Concept
Semantic Field
Emotions and values
Ontological Category
Property
Emoji
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- false English
- falsecard English
- falsed English
- falseface English
- falseful English
- falseheart English
- falsely English
- falsen English
- falseness English
- falsework English
- falsie English
- falsification English
- falsify English
- falsing English
- falsish English
- falsism English
- falsity English
- falsy English
- nonfalse English
- superfalse English
- unfalse English
- *fallita Latin
- falsificus Latin
- falsiloquium Latin
- falsimonia Latin
- falsitas Latin
- falsus Latin
- falsāre Latin
- falsārē Latin
- falsch German
- fals Hungarian
- falso Italian
- vals Dutch, Flemish
- falsifier French
- falso Spanish, Castilian
- *gʰwel- Proto-Indo-European
- falsk Norwegian Bokmål
- falsk Norwegian Nynorsk
- fals Old English
- false Middle English
- falsk Danish
- faulz Old French
- faus Old French
- fauz Old French
- fals Catalan, Valencian
- fals Icelandic
- fals Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- valsch Middle Dutch
- vals Middle High German
- fallco Albanian
- falso Old Portuguese
- falsch Middle Low German
- valsch Middle Low German
- baltz Cimbrian
- fals Occitan
- fals Friulian
- falso Old Spanish
- fuals Dalmatian