0 copied or made in imitation especially with a dishonest purpose -- falsk
counterfeit money.
1 not genuine or not real -- uekte
a counterfeit claim.
3 to pretend -- gi falskt skjær av, hykle
She counterfeited her friendship with him.
We may simulate some aspects of dependent typing by making counterfeit type-level copies of data, with type constructors simulating data constructors and type classes simulating datatypes.
A counterfeit voice, by definition inauthentic, will assuredly invite the opprobrium of jazz musicians, who equate imitation with the assumption of an identity not one's own.
However, counterfeiting of coin is done to reap a profit, and the only way in which it can generate profit is by adulterating the coin with copper or lead.
This prevents us from defining a universal recursion operator for each counterfeit datatype, just as we cannot express them for nested types.
If imitation or counterfeit coins were indistinguishable from genuine coin, the latter quickly would disappear from circulation.
The former, now a separate conceptual category, was declared socially counterproductive, a counterfeit privacy.
Theft, counterfeit products and damage to goods are always risks that manufacturers face when products are transported.
But it turns out to be scenepainting and counterfeit.