veridical
English
WOTD – 14 April 2016
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /vəˈɹɪdɪkəl/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
Adjective
veridical (comparative more veridical, superlative most veridical)
- True.
- Synonyms: veracious, veridicous (rare)
- Antonyms: false, falsidical
- Pertaining to an experience, perception, or interpretation that accurately represents reality.
- Antonyms: falsidical; delusory, illusory, imaginary, imaginative, unsubstantiated
- Few believe that all claimed religious experiences are veridical.
- 1995, Herbert Simon, “Guest Editorial”, in Public Administration Review, volume 55, number 5, page 404:
- There was great need for empirical research that would build a more veridical description of organizations and management.
- 2014, Berit Brogaard, Does Perception Have Content?, page 112:
- Searle himself notes that one way an experience might fail is for it to be a veridical hallucination: you might hallucinate a cat before you, and by accident there might be a cat before you.
Derived terms
Related terms
English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *weh₁- (0 c, 22 e)
See also
Anagrams
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.