| Links | |
|---|---|
| etymological origin of | lat: fallax |
| etymologically related | lat: fallāciōsus |
| etymologically related | lat: fallācia |
| etymologically related | lat: fallāciloquus |
| etymologically related | lat: fallācitās |
| etymologically related | lat: fallāciter |
| has derived form | lat: fallāx |
| has derived form | lat: fallēns |
| has derived form | lat: falla |
| has derived form | lat: falsārius |
| has derived form | lat: falsē |
| has derived form | lat: falsō |
| has derived form | lat: falsidicus |
| has derived form | lat: falsificus |
| has derived form | lat: falsiiūrius |
| has derived form | lat: falsiloquium |
| has derived form | lat: falsiloquus |
| has derived form | lat: falsimōnia |
| has derived form | lat: falsiparēns |
| has derived form | lat: falsitās |
| has derived form | lat: falsum |
| has derived form | lat: falsus |
| lexical category | verb |
| pronunciation | /ˈfal.loː/ |
| semantically related | lat: circumvenio |
| semantically related | lat: concipio |
| semantically related | lat: deludo |
| semantically related | lat: ficio |
| translation | eng: beguile |
| translation | eng: cheat |
| translation | eng: disappoint |
| translation | eng: perjure |
| translation | eng: trick |
Lexvo © 2008-2025 Gerard de Melo. Contact Legal Information / Imprint