simulate

simulate
I
(New American Roget's College Thesaurus)
v. t. imitate, resemble, mimic; feign, counterfeit, pretend.
II
(Roget's IV) v.
Syn. feign, pretend, counterfeit, dissemble, imitate, mimic, misrepresent, sham, fake, assume, affect, fabricate, disguise, concoct, exaggerate, play the hypocrite, playact, invent, copy, ape, duplicate, reproduce, resemble; see also pretend 1 .
See Synonym Study at pretend .
III
(Roget's 3 Superthesaurus) v.
imitate, copy, put on, act, mimic, fake, pretend, assume, pose, feign, affect, counterfeit, sham, replicate.
IV
(Roget's Thesaurus II) verb 1. To make a copy of: copy, duplicate, imitate, replicate, reproduce. See SAME. 2. To contrive and present as genuine: counterfeit, fake, feign, pretend. Idioms: make believe, put on an act. See TRUE. 3. To behave affectedly or insincerely or take on a false or misleading appearance of: act, counterfeit, dissemble, fake, feign, play-act, pose, pretend, put on, sham. See HONEST, TRUE. 4. To take on or give a false appearance of: affect2, assume, counterfeit, fake, feign, pretend, put on, sham. Idiom: make believe. See TRUE.

English dictionary for students. 2013.

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  • simulate — sim·u·late / sim yə ˌlāt/ vt lat·ed, lat·ing in the civil law of Louisiana: to make or carry out in a manner that does not express one s true intent a simulated sale of the debtor s property in which no consideration was paid Merriam Webster’s… …   Law dictionary

  • simulate — [sim′yo͞o lāt΄, sim′yəlāt΄] vt. simulated, simulating [< L simulatus, pp. of simulare, to feign < simul, together with, at the same time: see SAME] 1. to give a false indication or appearance of; pretend; feign [to simulate an interest] 2.… …   English World dictionary

  • Simulate — Sim u*late, a. [L. simulatus, p. p. of simulare to simulate; akin to simul at the same time, together, similis like. See {Similar}, and cf. {Dissemble}, {Semblance}.] Feigned; pretended. Bale. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Simulate — Sim u*late, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Simulated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Simulating}.] To assume the mere appearance of, without the reality; to assume the signs or indications of, falsely; to counterfeit; to feign. [1913 Webster] The Puritans, even in the… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • simulate — (v.) 1620s (implied in simulated), from L. simulatus, pp. of simulare (see SIMULATION (Cf. simulation)). First record of simulated in sense of imitative for purposes of experiment or training is from 1966 (simulation in this sense dates from… …   Etymology dictionary

  • simulate — feign, counterfeit, sham, pretend, *assume, affect Analogous words: dissemble, *disguise, cloak, mask, camouflage: ape, mock, mimic, imitate, *copy …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • simulate — [v] pretend, imitate act, act like, affect, ape, assume, bluff, borrow, cheat, concoct, copy, counterfeit, crib*, deceive, disguise, dissemble, do, do a take off*, do like*, equivocate, exaggerate, fabricate, fake, favor, feature, feign, fence,… …   New thesaurus

  • simulate — ► VERB ▪ imitate or reproduce the appearance, character, or conditions of. DERIVATIVES simulant noun simulation noun. ORIGIN Latin simulare copy, represent …   English terms dictionary

  • simulate — [[t]sɪ̱mjʊleɪt[/t]] simulates, simulating, simulated 1) VERB If you simulate an action or a feeling, you pretend that you are doing it or feeling it. [V n] They rolled about on the Gilligan Road, simulating a bloodthirsty fight... [V ed] He… …   English dictionary

  • simulate — 01. Wind tunnels [simulate] the conditions a vehicle will encounter when it moves through the air. 02. Warning: This movie contains scenes of [simulated] sex. 03. Using virtual reality, doctors can experiment with new procedures on [simulated]… …   Grammatical examples in English

  • simulate — simulation sim‧u‧la‧tion [ˌsɪmjˈleɪʆn] noun [countable, uncountable] an activity or situation that produces conditions which are not real, but have the appearance of being real, used especially for testing something: • A computer simulation… …   Financial and business terms

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