Untruth in a sentence as a noun

"Pedigree Matters" as an untruth: I wish this were the case.

It's just an untruth, from a practical perspective.

So arguing about the untruth of the religious axioms is missing the point.

I thought the author's pointing out of the supposed untruth that you don't have to download anything because you have to have Java to be a bit silly.

They leave the untruth published, but update later saying "earlier we reported a lie. Sorry 'bout that, it isn't true".Second:They didn't "correctly report on the older brother".

Noun 1. a false statement made with deliberate intent to deceive; an intentional untruth; a falsehood.

Nothing about the bill suggests it will be limited to operational network security data, so you should stop spreading this untruth.

If journalism is reporting untruths, what purpose does journalism have in the public interest?I entirely blame CNN here, and "This Just In" specifically.

Giving actual numbers is a way to remedy that specific bit of untruth.> my favorite bit is where they try to shock us with the half-life of UraniumFor the people who don't know: Long half-life means lower radiation over any given period.

Any person able to read a basic graph can see the untruth in Broder's article by looking at the charge graph, and I think that a more cool, professional approach could have given Tesla a very big PR boost as the more mature company in the situation.

Is there public case history where an individual or corporation has been forced to publicly state untruth or false facts for the sake of national security or other state need?With the warrant canary meme spreading, I wouldn't be surprised to find out that Section 215 warrants include warrant canary clauses.

Untruth definitions

noun

a false statement

See also: falsehood falsity