ψεύτικες
Wordform Details
Translation: fakefalseartificial
Part of Speech: adjective
Inflection Type:
femininepluralaccusativeIs Dictionary Form: No
Dictionary Form Details
Lemma: ψεύτικος
Translation: fake; false; artificial; phony; counterfeit; bogus; sham (adjective)
Etymology: Derived from the ancient Greek verb 'ψεύδω' (to lie, deceive), which is cognate with English 'pseudo-' as in 'pseudonym' or 'psychology'. The suffix '-ικος' forms adjectives indicating characteristics or qualities. This connection to the familiar English prefix 'pseudo-' makes the word's meaning quite transparent to English speakers. The root appears in many English scientific and technical terms where 'pseudo-' indicates something false or imitative.
Example Usage
Φοράει ψεύτικα κοσμήματα.
She wears fake jewelry.
Αυτό το χαμόγελο είναι ψεύτικο.
This smile is fake.
Μου έδωσε ψεύτικα στοιχεία.
He gave me false information.
Αγόρασε ένα ψεύτικο διαβατήριο.
He bought a counterfeit passport.
Έχει ψεύτικα δόντια.
He has false teeth.
Αυτό το ρολόι είναι ψεύτικο.
This watch is fake.
Το χαμόγελό της φαινόταν ψεύτικο.
Her smile seemed fake.
Mnemonics
- Think 'pseudo-' + '-tic' = fake or false
- Remember 'pseudonym' - a fake name
- ψεύτικος sounds like 'pseudo-tikos' - pseudo-fake
Antonyms
Cultural Context
Commonly used in everyday Greek to describe anything from fake jewelry to artificial flowers to insincere behavior. Often used more casually than formal terms like 'κίβδηλος'. Can describe both physical objects and abstract concepts like fake emotions or artificial situations.
Easily Confused With
Explanation: ψεύτης is a noun meaning 'liar' (person who lies), while ψεύτικος is an adjective meaning 'fake' (describing things or qualities)
Notes: Both come from the same root ψεύδ- but have different grammatical functions and slightly different semantic focuses
Mnemonic: ψεύτικος describes fake THINGS (-ικος ending like other adjectives), ψεύτης describes a lying PERSON (-ης ending like other masculine nouns for people)