Skew vs Falsify - What's the difference?
skew | falsify |
(mathematics) Neither perpendicular nor parallel (usually said of two lines).
To change or alter in a particular direction.
To shape or form in an oblique way; to cause to take an oblique position.
To throw or hurl obliquely.
To walk obliquely; to go sidling; to lie or move obliquely.
* L'Estrange
To start aside; to shy, as a horse.
To look obliquely; to squint; hence, to look slightingly or suspiciously.
(architecture) A stone at the foot of the slope of a gable, the offset of a buttress, etc., cut with a sloping surface and with a check to receive the coping stones and retain them in place.
To alter so as to make false; to make incorrect.
* Spenser
To misrepresent.
To prove to be false.
* Shakespeare
* Addison
To counterfeit; to forge.
(finance) To show, in accounting, (an item of charge inserted in an account) to be wrong.
(obsolete) To baffle or escape.
* Samuel Butler
(obsolete) To violate; to break by falsehood.
In lang=en terms the difference between skew and falsify
is that skew is to look obliquely; to squint; hence, to look slightingly or suspiciously while falsify is to counterfeit; to forge.As verbs the difference between skew and falsify
is that skew is to change or alter in a particular direction while falsify is to alter so as to make false; to make incorrect.As an adjective skew
is (mathematics) neither perpendicular nor parallel (usually said of two lines).As a noun skew
is (architecture) a stone at the foot of the slope of a gable, the offset of a buttress, etc, cut with a sloping surface and with a check to receive the coping stones and retain them in place.As an adverb skew
is awry; obliquely; askew.skew
English
Adjective
(-)Derived terms
* skew arch * skew back * skew bridge * skew curve * skew gearing, skew bevel gearing * skew surface * skew symmetrical determinantVerb
(en verb)- A disproportionate number of female subjects in the study group skewed the results.
- Child, you must walk straight, without skewing .
- (Beaumont and Fletcher)
Noun
(en noun)falsify
English
Verb
(en-verb)- to falsify a record or document
- The Irish bards use to forge and falsify everything as they list, to please or displease any man.
- By how much better than my word I am, / By so much shall I falsify men's hope.
- Jews and Pagans united all their endeavors, under Julian the apostate, to baffle and falsify the prediction.
- to falsify coin
- (Story)
- (Daniell)
- For disputants (as swordsmen use to fence / With blunted foyles) engage with blunted sense; / And as th' are wont to falsify a blow, / Use nothing else to pass upon a foe
- to falsify one's faith or word
- (Sir Philip Sidney)
