How to Use simulacrum in a Sentence

simulacrum

noun
  • Icon of the ’80s out; polyester simulacrum of the ’80s in.
    Kim Velsey, Curbed, 11 Aug. 2021
  • Third places are a vital part of cities and cities of all sizes need more of them—and more that aren’t a simulacrum.
    Diana Budds, Curbed, 31 May 2018
  • At root the anxiety is: Who is the human here, and who the simulacrum?
    Virginia Heffernan, WIRED, 25 Aug. 2017
  • Sometimes, though, a simulacrum of love just has to do.
    Laird Borrelli-Persson, Vogue, 14 Feb. 2019
  • The message was clear: Buy this simulacrum of part of my body and join me in this array of beauties.
    Rhonda Garelick, New York Times, 15 Feb. 2023
  • What’s left is a simulacrum of closeness and care that takes place in the digital space.
    Annie Vainshtein, SFChronicle.com, 27 June 2019
  • Buffett has given his fans a path to a simulacrum of the island life.
    Taffy Brodesser-Akner, miamiherald, 8 Feb. 2018
  • My brief moment in the spotlight, a two-minute simulacrum of what is a showbiz dream for many, had come to an end.
    Todd Martens Game Critic, Los Angeles Times, 10 Sep. 2021
  • In so many ways, the story of Keith Raniere is a fitting simulacrum for our post-truth world.
    Amelia Harnish, refinery29.com, 29 June 2018
  • And far away, a simulacrum of nature: a perfect leaf crafted in grass-fed foam.
    Meredith Maran, Los Angeles Times, 18 Apr. 2023
  • Is this a person whose standards have fallen low enough that the barest simulacrum of fun is worth noting?
    Nitsuh Abebe, New York Times, 29 Sep. 2017
  • That, as the governor’s lawyer Rita Glavin complained this morning, was the simulacrum of due process.
    Andrew C. McCarthy, National Review, 10 Aug. 2021
  • For starters, his performance was at best a simulacrum.
    Ben Greenman, The New Yorker, 13 Feb. 2017
  • With pride, Nosrati pointed out the expansive roof-deck complete with a firepit and olive trees: a simulacrum of a backyard.
    Adrian Chen, Curbed, 5 July 2021
  • Kevin Depinet’s detailed set is a nifty simulacrum of the original Sun venue that offers a sense of close quarters on the large Paramount stage.
    Kerry Reid, chicagotribune.com, 18 Sep. 2017
  • But it’s a galvanizing, tough book, one that asks us to not accept a simulacrum of improvement for the real thing.
    Kate Knibbs, WIRED, 26 Dec. 2022
  • But the moment of recognition is overlaid with his sense that the man in the overcoat is only one of several simulacra of himself.
    Marco Roth, The New Yorker, 16 Feb. 2023
  • The evening offered a simulacrum of an American program, polished and shiny.
    Washington Post, 8 June 2019
  • In Stories, food is less an object to fetishize than a prop in the narrative, a set piece for a small-scale Kardashians simulacrum, and everyone gets to be Kim.
    Julia Kramer, Bon Appetit, 23 Mar. 2018
  • The color palette shifted from the beige and olive green of roadside scrub to charcoal trunks and scorched leaves in shades of orange, an uncanny simulacrum of autumn.
    David Maurice Smith, Smithsonian Magazine, 10 June 2020
  • What else could result from this but the thin simulacrum of brotherhood, a bond based not upon the specifics of my life but upon the shared condition of a Y chromosome?
    Barrett Swanson, Harper's magazine, 28 Oct. 2019
  • For the homeless, South Station offers at least a simulacrum of protection.
    Deanna Pan, BostonGlobe.com, 17 Aug. 2019
  • The holiday train, like the other ghost trains, is a simulacrum of a locomotive, with sounds and thousands of LED lights standing in for the actual train.
    Steven Martinez, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 26 Nov. 2019
  • But this title race had never really been a drama, merely the simulacrum of one.
    Rory Smith, New York Times, 12 May 2017
  • That may remain the case until a simulacrum of space is indistinguishable from our own.
    Edward Rothstein, WSJ, 24 July 2018
  • Even the man who created the monster isn’t immune to its simulacrum of human connection.
    Alison Willmore, Vulture, 22 Feb. 2021
  • An outer-borough boy from Queens who grew up longing to make his name in Manhattan, Trump flecked his every home with gold, bleached his teeth, and blew out his hair in a gaudy simulacrum of wealth.
    vanityfair.com, 2 Feb. 2017
  • The stage show uses balletic movements to recall those of felines, and over-the-top costumes to achieve suggestion rather than simulacrum.
    Rumaan Alam, The New Republic, 24 Dec. 2019
  • The illusions that Losey revealed weren’t just those to which Klein was initiated but those of France at large, a country that, at that very moment, was a mere simulacrum of itself.
    Richard Brody, The New Yorker, 6 Sep. 2019
  • Both sell a vacuous simulacrum of a lifestyle that does not match up with reality.
    T.d. Williams, The Root, 26 Apr. 2018

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

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