13 example sentences using verisimilitude.
Verisimilitude used in a sentence
Verisimilitude in a sentence as a noun
Really the verisimilitude has gotten out of hand in ebook apps if you ask me.
Games are formal systems with a veneer of verisimilitude.
Use of these within color fields can be useful and add visual interest and verisimilitude as well.
Each step requires patience and much verisimilitude in the face of extreme danger, fear, uncertainty and .. doubt.
Also, despite the issues raised here, it achieved a reasonably high degree of verisimilitude.
Parody can take the ball and run with it as far as it chooses; satire can only be relevant if its characterization has a degree of verisimilitude.
I did this because—at the time I worked the incident—I was working with real numbers, so the story needed them for verisimilitude, to give a sense of what I was wrestling with.
In such a case then you could never fault someone for saying "everyone should be maximally good at everything" but it has no verisimilitude with reality.
Its characters are over the top, yet their interactions and the ensuing consequences have a ring of political verisimilitude unlike any similar comedic piece.
'Now we come to something that has the verisimilitude of a rational argument, and we can immediately see why you were reluctant to go there, despite the manifest failings of the alternatives you tried.
I'm not seeing how live satellite broadcasts of a talking head from the roof of a 5 star hotel in a warzone or a suburban street as bodies are dug up adds anything but verisimilitude to whatever soundbites theyre spouting.
"Merely corroborative detail, intended to give artistic verisimilitude to an otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative.."
"I know there is a segment here that doesn't believe tone/communication style should matter, that it is, or should be, entirely about the underlying verisimilitude of their statements; unfortunately, that is not how 99% of human beings actually operate.
Verisimilitude definitions
the appearance of truth; the quality of seeming to be true