invented 的定义
- to originate or create as a product of one's own ingenuity, experimentation, or contrivance: to invent the telegraph.
- to produce or create with the imagination: to invent a story.
- to make up or fabricate: to invent excuses.
- Archaic. to come upon; find.
invented 近义词
fictitious
invented 的近义词 49 个
- assumed
- created
- fabricated
- fanciful
- fictional
- imaginary
- imagined
- made-up
- simulated
- unreal
- concocted
- counterfeit
- fake
- faked
- fashioned
- feigned
- improvised
- made
- misleading
- mock
- queer
- sham
- apocryphal
- artificial
- bogus
- chimerical
- cooked-up
- deceptive
- delusive
- delusory
- dishonest
- ersatz
- factitious
- false
- fantastic
- fantastical
- fictive
- figmental
- hyped up
- illusory
- make-believe
- mythical
- phony
- romantic
- spurious
- suppositious
- supposititious
- synthetic
- trumped-up
invented 的反义词 4 个
更多invented例句
- If putting the purpose of a business at the heart of corporate law does all of that, one might well wonder why we invented the corporation in the first place.
- In 1994, mathematician Peter Shor invented an algorithm, that if run on a sufficiently powerful quantum computer, would easily find these two primes.
- It was a British TV company that wanted him to invent a language for monsters with no lips, just big teeth, in a new fantasy series, Beowulf.
- By September, the Justice Department drops all charges after it is revealed that the schematics were of an entirely different device that Xi had invented.
- His goal is to refine and commercialize technology, rather than invent anything entirely new.
- I still do find it a tremendously useful device to invent a character and have the character sing the song.
- As a Harvard undergraduate, he used systolic blood pressure readings to invent the lie detector test.
- Did McCarthy invent the portrayal of violence in fiction, or should that laurel go to Homer?
- Reform first came in 1935 when Lenora Slaughter was hired to re-invent the pageant as its new director.
- By using an alter ego, he liberates himself, relaxes himself so he can invent freely.
- I add nothing to the “Extremes,” import nothing from abroad in regard to them, invent nothing.
- As if there were not enough real tragedy in the world and it were necessary to invent!
- Controve, compose or invent tunes, foule fayle, fail miserably.
- She might have invented a pretext for staying away; she might even invent a pretext now for going.
- If a man prefers not to speak of himself or of his doings, his enemies will soon invent some tale of their own.