English
Etymology
fiction + -al
Adjective
fictional (comparative more fictional, superlative most fictional)
- Invented, as opposed to real.
- Romeo and Juliet are fictional characters.
- The janitor's account of the crime turned out to be entirely fictional.
- Relating to, or that appears in a work of fiction
Translations
invented, as opposed to real
- Bulgarian: измислен (bg) (izmislen), въображаем (bg) (vǎobražaem)
- Catalan: ficcional
- Danish: opdigtet
- Dutch: fictief (nl)
- Finnish: kuvitteellinen (fi), fiktiivinen (fi)
- French: fictif (fr)
- Galician: ficticio
- German: fiktiv (de), fiktional (de), erfunden (de), ausgedacht (de)
- Greek: φανταστικός (el) (fantastikós)
- (deprecated template usage)
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- Hungarian: kitalált (hu), fiktív (hu)
- Icelandic: skáldskapar-, uppspunninn, skáldaður, tilbúinn (is), upploginn
- Italian: immaginario (it), fittizio (it), inventato (it), finto (it)
- Polish: fikcyjny (pl)
- Portuguese: fictício (pt)
- Russian: вы́мышленный (ru) (výmyšlennyj), вы́думанный (ru) (výdumannyj), фикти́вный (ru) (fiktívnyj)
- Spanish: ficticio (es), inventado (es), ficcional (es)
- Swahili: -a kubuniwa
- Swedish: fiktiv (sv)
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