English to Tamil Dictionary fictional

fictional

கற்பனை
definition
adjective
fictional texts
of or relating to fiction; invented for the purposes of fiction.
example
Now imagine how our 'fictional' family's activities are affected by heritage legislation.
By the way: the invitation to this party says that I should come dressed as a 'fictional' character.
They can either be 'fictional' , someone you know right now, or someone that you knew a long time ago.
Both started out with a narrowly defined 'fictional' territory, and both have tried to extend their range.
I think I can afford to be indecisive on the matter of which 'fictional' character I like the most.
However, the action of the play and the feelings of both the characters are entirely 'fictional' .
Create a specific brief for an article and then write it, or make up a 'fictional' company and write copy for their website.
The police in his books are definitely the good guys, despite a trend for corrupt 'fictional' detectives.
He is 'fictional' , but his character is interestingly similar to the early life of Pius XII.
Gaumontville takes place in a 'fictional' municipality on the day of a mayoral election.
To help him play Trevor with conviction, Ferns invented a 'fictional' biography for the troubled man.
For film producers, the past is merely a starting point, the foundation on which to build a 'fictional' story.
Mock biographies of 'fictional' characters have long been a staple joke of publishers.
He is quite happy to be compared to Mary Shelley's 'fictional' character, Frankenstein.
As companies rush to patent gene sequences, a 'fictional' lawsuit raises disturbing questions.
The test features an unlikely, completely 'fictional' situation in which you will have to make a decision.
He was part of the way through publishing a short 'fictional' novel on his blog.
Wrong's excellent book is peopled by the kind of characters no 'fictional' framing could ever conceive.
Last year he won an award at a London catering show for carving another 'fictional' wizard, Harry Potter.
It is now less and less necessary for the writer to invent the 'fictional' content of his novel.
To an extent, the book is a 'fictionalization' of the life of real-world CIA man, Robert Ames.
It limits the damage done by a story by forcing its audience to realize its 'fictionality' at almost every moment.
Years ago I received a crash course in dating and romancing from a Southern spitfire, an experience I 'fictionalized' in my novel The Catsitters.
Like Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the South American writer with whom she is being lavishly compared by her rather over-enthusiastic publishers, Enright is interested in the 'fictionality' of history.
I guess I'm 'fictionalizing' parts of my glory days for the book.
I like to think that I've plotted it in such a way that though the idea came from personal experience, that I've moved it away into a realm of obvious 'fictionality' .
The first is a 'fictionalisation' of several different events involving vast stretches of sea, the accidental abandonment of two divers and the presence of sharks.
From what little is known about the shops, all shared some of the characteristics that Dickens had managed to fix 'fictionally' by 1840: they were disorganized, overstuffed, eclectic, and fading.
By attempting to embody that 'fictionality' , Woolf's ‘A Tale Told by Moonlight’ thickens the silvery self-image that Peter Walsh encounters in the metropolitan world of Mrs Dalloway.
Above all, it allows us to achieve - if only 'fictionally' - the rare satisfaction of justice, real, moral, or poetic.
Credits: Google Translate
Download the
HelloEnglishApp
image_one