Pretense vs Paternalize - What's the difference?
pretense | paternalize |
(US) A false or hypocritical profession, as, under pretense of friendliness.
Intention or purpose not real but professed.
An unsupported claim made or implied.
An insincere attempt to reach a specific condition or quality.
To make paternal; to place in a fatherly role.
* 1912 , Edith M Phelps, Selected Articles on Government Ownership of the Telegraph
control organizations, things etc. disregarding people's freedom and responsibility under guise and pretense of knowing what would be good and proper for them
As a noun pretense
is (us) a false or hypocritical profession, as, under pretense of friendliness.As a verb paternalize is
to make paternal; to place in a fatherly role.pretense
English
Alternative forms
* pretence (Only correct spelling in the UK, the Republic of Ireland, and Commonwealth countries, and historical use in the United States) * (archaic)Noun
(en noun)- with only a pretense of accuracy
Synonyms
* affectation denotes deception for the sake of escape from punishment or an awkward situation * false pretense * fiction * imitation * pretext * sham * subterfuge * See alsoExternal links
* *Anagrams
* * *paternalize
English
Verb
(paternaliz)- To paternalize the government or make it more bureaucratic is in their judgment to repress private enterprise and to imitate the monarchical systems...