0 past simple and past participle of falsify
1 to change something, such as a document, in order to deceive people:
The certificate had clearly been falsified.
In the second place, time has completely falsified his ideas about the nature of coin finds in the countryside and in the north-western provinces.
In fact, it is not easy to imagine how it could be falsified at all.
The countervailing factors are so rich, that these tendencies cannot be practically falsified.
Another problem of centralized reputation systems is that of vulnerability to falsified information.
First, those who did not fight could not complain that the others had violated the law and falsified the elections.
If the effect is not seen, then the hypothesis that participants use the recognition heuristic in this situation is falsified.
The traditional use of experiments is to test if theories are false, and a theory can be falsified with a single wellchosen experiment.
If the ad hoc protective hypotheses themselves are falsified, yet more defences will be invented.