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simulacre
[ sim-yuh-ley-ker ]
Other Words From
- sim·u·la·cral [sim-y, uh, -, ley, -kr, uh, l], adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of simulacre1
Example Sentences
Disgusting as the whole performance may appear, more especially the blasphemous simulacre of religious worship, it must be admitted in palliation that the very idea of mocking the rites of the Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Church never so much as enters the minds of the performers, who would repudiate with the utmost indignation the notion of intentionally placing themselves outside the pale of the Church, and violating the "buenas costumbres" by what they are doing.
Its inhabitiants, at once fearsome and folksy, were at best expertly stage-managed simulacre of U.S. small-town types, at worst human caricatures of something ineluctably real.
The great chief Simulacre summons you!
Should she fail in what she now sought to affect, it was her ruthless purpose to scatter the miserable simulacre into its original elements.
Should she fail in what she now sought to effect, it was her ruthless purpose to scatter the miserable simulacre into its original elements.
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