Illusory in a sentence as an adjective

We reject it because those benefits are illusory.

The arguments were the same "You can't make any money selling games, its too hard, no one buys them, the market is illusory.

All those contacts of yours have been illusory, but owing to your ignorance of the circumstances you take them to be real.

For the sake of argument I'm even willing to concede that it's largely illusory -- because that doesn't matter.

Instead, the cuts being discussed are illusory and are not cuts from current amounts being spent, but cuts in prospective spending increases.

It's a lot of front-loading for rewards that may at first glance seem illusory, but investing the time now will pay dividends later.

The simplicity of text protocols is illusory and mostly leads to bad implementations that look like they work but don't really.

If you're upset enough to "fork the FSF" you're probably suffering from some illusory feeling of connectedness towards Jobs.

Only the creation of physical things apparently counts as real productivity, and all of this service economy **** is somehow wishy washy or even illusory.

Yes, what you're describing, the illusory superiority effect, was originally demonstrated in Westerners, but found not to replicate as well in Asian cultures.

[1] The unskilled therefore suffer from illusory superiority, rating their ability as above average, much higher than it actually is, while the highly skilled underrate their own abilities, suffering from illusory inferiority.

Illusory definitions

adjective

based on or having the nature of an illusion; "illusive hopes of finding a better job"; "Secret activities offer presidents the alluring but often illusory promise that they can achieve foreign policy goals without the bothersome debate and open decision that are staples of democracy"

See also: illusive