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Webster 1913 Edition


Veritable

Ver′i-ta-ble

,
Adj.
[F.
véritable
. See
Verity
.]
Agreeable to truth or to fact; actual; real; true; genuine.
“The veritable Deity.”
Sir W. Hamilton.
Ver′i-ta-bly
,
adv.

Webster 1828 Edition


Veritable

VER'ITABLE

,
Adj.
True; agreeable to fact. [Little used.]

Definition 2024


veritable

veritable

See also: véritable

English

Adjective

veritable (comparative more veritable, superlative most veritable)

  1. True, real.
    • 1974, Thomas S. Szasz, M.D., chapter 11, in The Myth of Mental Illness, ISBN 0-06-091151-4, page 193:
      Life in the Middle Ages was a colossal religious game. The
      dominant value was salvation in a life hereafter. Emphasizing
      that "to divorce medieval hysteria from its time and place is
      not possible,"21 Gallinek observes:
      It was the aim of man to leave all things worldly as far behind as
      possible, and already during lifetime to approach the kingdom of
      heaven. The aim was salvation. Salvation was the Christian master
      motive.—The ideal man of the Middle Ages was free of all fear
      because he was sure of salvation, certain of eternal bliss. He was
      the saint, and the saint, not the knight nor the troubadour, is the
      veritable ideal of the Middle Ages.22
    He is a veritable swine.
    A fair is a veritable smorgasbord. (From Charlotte's Web).

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Etymology

Latin veritabilis

Adjective

veritable m, f (masculine and feminine plural veritables)

  1. real; true; veritable

Synonyms


Middle French

Adjective

veritable m, f (plural veritables)

  1. true; real; not fake

Old French

Adjective

veritable m (oblique and nominative feminine singular veritable)

  1. true; real; not fake
    • circa 1170, Chrétien de Troyes, Érec et Énide:
      Li rois respont: "N'est mie fable,
      Ceste parole est veritable:
      The king responded "it's not a fairytale
      this story is true["]