untruthful
/ʌnˈtruːθfl/ (bre, ipa) · /ʌnˈtruːθfl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˌən-ˈtrüth-fəl/ (ame, mw)
untruthful — 形容詞
- untruthfulpositive
- more untruthfulcomparative
- most untruthfulsuperlative
1. describing someone who says things they know are false, or a statement, claim, o
不誠實;說謊
描述明知不實卻仍說出的話語
describing someone who says things they know are false, or a statement, claim, or report that is deliberately wrong and meant to mislead
The politician's untruthful claims about the budget were quickly exposed by journalists.
那位政治人物針對預算提出的不實說詞,很快就被記者揭露。
untruthful + noun [claim/report/statement]
Nikos admitted he had been untruthful about his qualifications during the job interview.
Nikos 承認自己在工作面試時對資歷說了謊。
untruthful about + noun phrase
During the trial, Wei gave an untruthful answer when the lawyer asked where he had been that night.
在審判過程中,Wei 在律師問起他那晚在哪裡時,給了一個不實的回答。
Tomás refused to publish the article because it contained untruthful information about the mayor.
Tomás 拒絕刊登那篇文章,因為裡頭有關市長的資訊是不實的。
- dishonest
broader meaning that covers cheating, stealing, and lying; untruthful is more specific to speech and writing
- lying
more direct and strongly accusatory than untruthful, which can sound slightly softer
- deceitful
emphasises a deliberate intention to trick others, carrying a stronger negative moral judgement
文法句型
be untruthful
be untruthful about something
untruthful + noun
用法筆記
Unlike dishonest, which covers any form of deception including cheating or stealing, untruthful almost always refers specifically to what someone says or writes. It is more common in formal or written English than in casual conversation. The phrase be untruthful about something requires the preposition about before the topic.