1 invented and not true or existing; false: --
He registered at the hotel under a fictitious name.
2 not real: --
Approximately a quarter of participants came to believe in the occurrence of such fictitious events.
We introduce two additional fictitious actions stop and noop and a new fluent ended.
The trouble is that sometimes people listen to them and, without the wherewithall to distinguish between real and fictitious problems, act on what they hear.
Figure 4 shows a simplified calculation of grades for a fictitious class.
Apparently, a laser pulse will propagate with increasing velocity in such a fictitious plasma.
We suppose that the obstacles position generates a fictitious force, which depends on the distance between the mobile robot and obstacle.
Grounded in the qualitative experiences of a fictitious family, the book is divided into seven chapters.
Fictitious play between transparent agents seems a definite non-starter for our understanding of this process.