Facsimile in a sentence as a noun

I'm not saying it's a facsimile, it never would be.

I am reminded of the facsimile of the frog.

In a lot of places in the US what passes for bread is like processed cheese - possibly tasty, but a pale facsimile of the real thing.

I felt that I would never be able to capture myself through my profile/pics/etc and didn't want to be judged by a poor facsimile.

> Will someone please, please, please make a reasonable > Gmail facsimile that I can pay for, so that I don't have > to put up with these arbitrary changes?

At least with retina scans and fingerprints, there are mechanical obstacles to producing a facsimile.

Just fill out this paperwork, send a facsimile to the security, privacy, and QA departments, get approval from the VP, SVP, and release coordinator and you're good to launch!

So many of the others try to be rather different to Reader or go overboard with 'social' features and that's not what I want, so as a near facsimile of the Reader model, NewsBlur gets my vote.

Facsimile in a sentence as a verb

It does not matter that you set up a subdomain to send people to for payments; malicious Javascript is just going to "send" users to an extremely authentic looking facsimile of that domain.

It seems to me that, with the ubiquity of smartphones and how powerful they're becoming, it's only a matter of time before there's a constantly-evolving digital facsimile of the real world.

Computer systems can only produce a paper facsimile of the vote cast and thus it must be checked, immediately, by the voter to verify that their intentions were recorded and reflected.

In one afternoon I made an avatar that was a reasonable facsimile of actual me, round-faced gray-bearded professorial type, I even found a leather-elbowed sweater to wear.

You're engaging only a facsimile of Marco's argument, which he frames in terms of Starbucks and indie coffee houses: yes, Starbucks put a lot of coffee houses out of business, some times in a predatory fashion.

> To repeat them, and generate a perfect facsimile of reality down to the last atom, would take more energy than the universe hasHe's only saying that we cannot simulate this universe within itself.

Since a driving test involves driving, and I've never once encountered a technical interview that involved any reasonable facsimile of an actual technical work environment... No, absolutely not.

Facsimile definitions

noun

an exact copy or reproduction

See also: autotype

noun

duplicator that transmits the copy by wire or radio

verb

send something via a facsimile machine; "Can you fax me the report right away?"

See also: telefax