feign

verb

feigned; feigning; feigns

transitive verb

1
a
: to give a false appearance of : induce as a false impression
feign death
b
: to assert as if true : pretend
He feigned that he was not feeling well so that he could leave the party early.
2
archaic
b
: to give fictional representation to
3
obsolete : disguise, conceal

intransitive verb

: pretend, dissemble
He told the truth because he was no good at feigning.
feigner noun

Did you know?

The Shape of the History of Feign

Feign is all about faking it, but that hasn't always been so. An early meaning of the word is "to fashion, form, or shape." That meaning comes from its Latin source: the verb fingere. In time, people began fashioning feign to suggest the act of forming, or giving shape to, false appearances.

Choose the Right Synonym for feign

assume, affect, pretend, simulate, feign, counterfeit, sham mean to put on a false or deceptive appearance.

assume often implies a justifiable motive rather than an intent to deceive.

assumed an air of cheerfulness around the patients

affect implies making a false show of possessing, using, or feeling.

affected an interest in art

pretend implies an overt and sustained false appearance.

pretended that nothing had happened

simulate suggests a close imitation of the appearance of something.

cosmetics that simulate a suntan

feign implies more artful invention than pretend, less specific mimicry than simulate.

feigned sickness

counterfeit implies achieving the highest degree of verisimilitude of any of these words.

an actor counterfeiting drunkenness

sham implies an obvious falseness that fools only the gullible.

shammed a most unconvincing limp

Examples of feign in a Sentence

I wince, feigning interest in a TV Guide and mumbling a hello. Douglas Coupland, Generation X, 1991
Success keeps her busy. "Relaxation?" she asks, feigning puzzlement. "What's that?" Jennifer Johnston, New Woman, November 1990
… Brad would sometimes clown or feign clumsiness just to crack her composed expression with a blush or a disapproving frown. John Updike, Trust Me, 1987
I would never feign illness just to get out of a test.
Recent Examples on the Web China, according to this view, was merely feigning an appetite for liberalization. Daniel H. Rosen, Foreign Affairs, 22 June 2021 His rage had been scary, but this utter indifference in the aftermath, which was not in the least feigned, produced in me a new kind of pain. Emily Witt, The New Yorker, 1 July 2024 After taking a touch, Swanson pushed a deft, right-footed pass into the penalty area for Smith, who feigned to the inside, then went to the outside to shed German defender Felicitas Rauch before sliding to the turf and lifting a right-footed shot over keeper Ann-Katrin Berger. Kevin Baxter, Los Angeles Times, 6 Aug. 2024 Instead, the international community dithered as Saleh feigned interest in a deal to step down from power. Letta Tayler, Foreign Affairs, 26 Sep. 2011 See all Example Sentences for feign 

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'feign.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Word History

Etymology

Middle English feynen, feignen "to make, fabricate, make a likeness of, dissemble, pretend to be," borrowed from Anglo-French feign-, stem of feindre, going back to Latin fingere "to mold, fashion, make a likeness of, pretend to be," going back to Indo-European *dhi-n-ǵh- (whence also Old Irish con-utuinc "builds, constructs," Armenian dizanem "[I] heap up"), present tense derivative of *dhei̯ǵh- "knead, shape," whence Gothic digan "to knead, form from clay," Old Church Slavic ziždǫ, zĭdati "to build," Lithuanian žiedžiù, žiẽsti "to form, shape (from clay)" (Balto-Slavic with metathesis of stop consonants), Armenian edēz "(s/he) heaped up," Tocharian B tsik- "fashion, shape, build," Sanskrit pari … déhat "will cover over, smear over"

Note: See also etymologies at dough, paradise, and thigmotropism.

First Known Use

13th century, in the meaning defined at intransitive sense

Time Traveler
The first known use of feign was in the 13th century

Dictionary Entries Near feign

Cite this Entry

“Feign.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/feign. Accessed 1 Oct. 2024.

Kids Definition

feign

verb
1
: to give a false appearance of : fake
feign illness
2
: to state as if true
feign an excuse

More from Merriam-Webster on feign

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