How to Use spurious in a Sentence
spurious
adjective-
Well, of course, Democrats laughed, laughed all of this off as spurious.
— Fox News, 22 May 2018 -
But, alas, spurious balance dumps dung in the well even here.
— Charles P. Pierce, Esquire, 11 Mar. 2016 -
The comment drew lots of users to Google, curious about one thing: what does spurious mean?
— Brett Molina, USA TODAY, 17 Oct. 2017 -
My issue isn't with CRT, which is a movement that emerged in the 1970s to challenge the spurious notion that the law is impartial.
— Brandon Tensley, CNN, 2 Sep. 2021 -
Some will be giving you much insight, but many will be spurious.
— Razib Khan, Discover Magazine, 10 Jan. 2013 -
But the Bail Project's experience gives the lie to the bail bond industry's spurious claims.
— Shania Russell, EW.com, 22 Oct. 2023 -
But none of that has stopped Trump from continuing to proclaim his spurious gospel of fraud.
— Los Angeles Times, 30 Nov. 2021 -
And what about people who falsely tell the app they were infected, just to set off waves of spurious warnings?
— Aaron Pressman, Fortune, 14 May 2021 -
This spurious charge has circulated for 50 years in search of proof.
— WSJ, 21 Sep. 2018 -
There are other spurious reasons for dodging the flu shot.
— Arkansas Online, 7 Nov. 2020 -
How dare the Vikings fans besmirch our good names — what was left of them, anyway — with unfounded and spurious slanders.
— Mike Newall, Philly.com, 18 Jan. 2018 -
The simplest explanation, and the one the new papers argue for, is that the correlation was spurious in the first place.
— John Timmer, Ars Technica, 13 June 2019 -
Other, more spurious claims — about the nature of cats themselves — may give readers pause.
— Washington Post, 24 Nov. 2020 -
The Danish researchers also took measures to ensure that the link between the gene and the disorder was not spurious.
— Karen Weintraub, Scientific American, 17 June 2019 -
The publicity may be strained and the plots spurious, but in the ring there is no hiding from the reality of a jab, a cross, blood leaking from a swollen eye.
— Brady Brickner-Wood, New York Times, 11 Oct. 2023 -
There was no retraction or even correction, just a shift to a new line of spurious attack.
— Conrad Black, National Review, 28 Apr. 2020 -
The world of food is no stranger to fake news: A banquet chef ran out of heavy cream, one spurious story goes, and invented mayonnaise.
— Christopher Kimball, WSJ, 31 Mar. 2017 -
Zippel wrote Tuesday night on X that the Jazz took Irving's side and that the team had cited a spurious policy to get the signs taken down.
— Patrick Smith, NBC News, 4 Jan. 2024 -
Those who persevere are harassed by the police or charged with spurious crimes.
— New York Times, 19 Nov. 2020 -
Court after court threw out Trump's spurious claims of election fraud after his defeat to Biden.
— Stephen Collinson, CNN, 4 May 2021 -
China hopes France can at least hold a fair and level-headed stance, and not side with those spurious arguments.
— Bloomberg.com, 7 Jan. 2018 -
But there are reasons to think that causal claims inferred from the correlation are spurious.
— Andrew Stuttaford, National Review, 12 Nov. 2023 -
Its purpose, though, is to give Mr Putin’s ploy an air of spurious legality.
— The Economist, 10 Mar. 2020 -
But the presidential election, no matter how spurious, is in three months, and Nadezhdin says someone has to speak up.
— Keir Simmons, NBC News, 14 Dec. 2023 -
Contrary to Goldberg’s spurious claim, the Prime Minister does not seek to preserve the status quo.
— Jeffrey Goldberg, The Atlantic, 6 Oct. 2016 -
A number of prominent players skipped the game for what appeared to be spurious reasons.
— BostonGlobe.com, 18 July 2021 -
Regardless of whether the accusations against Mr. Stringer and Mr. Adams prove spurious or damning, one thing is true, at least for now.
— Ginia Bellafante, New York Times, 13 May 2021 -
Now, Pence is ending his tenure with an even bigger test of whether to support Trump’s spurious election claims.
— Maureen Groppe, USA TODAY, 6 Jan. 2021 -
Yet none of the genomes showed more than one percent European ancestry, a fraction low enough to be ascribed to a spurious statistical fluke.
— John Timmer, Ars Technica, 11 Sep. 2024 -
Social media users have made spurious links between the selection of a Labour government in this year’s general election and that of Oasis’ return.
— Thomas Smith, Billboard, 6 Sep. 2024
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'spurious.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
Last Updated: