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HOME | Definition of authentic (AUTHENTIC, Authentic)


    Authentic \Au*then"tic\, a. [OE. autentik, OF. autentique, F.
    authentique, L. authenticus coming from the real author, of
    original or firsthand authority, from Gr. ?, fr. ? suicide, a
    perpetrator or real author of any act, an absolute master;
    a'yto`s self + a form "enths (not found), akin to L. sons and
    perh. orig. from the p. pr. of e'i^nai to be, root as, and
    meaning the one it really is. See Am, Sin, n., and cf.
    Effendi.]
    1. Having a genuine original or authority, in opposition to
    that which is false, fictitious, counterfeit, or
    apocryphal; being what it purports to be; genuine; not of
    doubtful origin; real; as, an authentic paper or register.
    [1913 Webster]

    To be avenged
    On him who had stole Jove's authentic fire.
    --Milton.
    [1913 Webster]

    2. Authoritative. [Obs.] --Milton.
    [1913 Webster]

    3. Of approved authority; true; trustworthy; credible; as, an
    authentic writer; an authentic portrait; authentic
    information.
    [1913 Webster]

    4. (Law) Vested with all due formalities, and legally
    attested.
    [1913 Webster]

    5. (Mus.) Having as immediate relation to the tonic, in
    distinction from plagal, which has a correspondent
    relation to the dominant in the octave below the tonic.
    [1913 Webster]

    Syn: Authentic, Genuine.

    Usage: These words, as here compared, have reference to
    historical documents. We call a document genuine when
    it can be traced back ultimately to the author or
    authors from whom it professes to emanate. Hence, the
    word has the meaning, "not changed from the original,
    uncorrupted, unadulterated:" as, a genuine text. We
    call a document authentic when, on the ground of its
    being thus traced back, it may be relied on as true
    and authoritative (from the primary sense of "having
    an author, vouched for"); hence its extended
    signification, in general literature, of trustworthy,
    as resting on unquestionable authority or evidence;
    as, an authentic history; an authentic report of
    facts.
    [1913 Webster]

    A genuine book is that which was written by the
    person whose name it bears, as the author of it.
    An authentic book is that which relates matters
    of fact as they really happened. A book may be
    genuine without being, authentic, and a book may
    be authentic without being genuine. --Bp.
    Watson.
    [1913 Webster]

    Note: It may be said, however, that some writers use
    authentic (as, an authentic document) in the sense of
    "produced by its professed author, not counterfeit."
    [1913 Webster]

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    Authentic \Au*then"tic\, n.
    An original (book or document). [Obs.] "Authentics and
    transcripts." --Fuller.
    [1913 Webster]

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    authentic
    adj 1: conforming to fact and therefore worthy of belief; "an
    authentic account by an eyewitness"; "reliable
    information" [syn: reliable]
    2: not counterfeit or copied; "an authentic signature"; "a bona
    fide manuscript"; "an unquestionable antique";
    "photographs taken in a veritable bull ring" [syn: bona
    fide
    , unquestionable, veritable]

    WordNet (r) 2.0


    187 Moby Thesaurus words for "authentic":
    Christian, aboveboard, absolute, accepted, accurate, actual,
    adducible, admissible, approved, attestative, attestive,
    authoritative, avant-garde, based on, bona fide, candid, canonical,
    card-carrying, cathedral, certain, circumstantial, cognizable,
    conclusive, conventional, convincing, correct, creative, credible,
    cumulative, customary, damning, de facto, decisive, dependable,
    determinative, dinkum, documentary, documented, evangelical,
    evidential, evidentiary, ex cathedra, ex parte, eye-witness,
    factual, fair and square, faithful, final, firm, firsthand,
    following the letter, for real, founded on, foursquare, fresh,
    genuine, good, good-faith, grounded on, hearsay, historical,
    honest, honest-to-God, imaginative, implicit, inartificial,
    incontrovertible, indicative, indisputable, indubitable,
    irrefutable, irresistible, knowable, lawful, legitimate, lifelike,
    literal, magisterial, material, natural, naturalistic, new, novel,
    nuncupative, of the faith, official, on the level, on the square,
    on the up-and-up, open, open and aboveboard, original, orthodox,
    orthodoxical, overwhelming, positive, presumptive, probative,
    proper, pukka, pure, questionless, real, realistic, received,
    recognizable, reliable, revolutionary, right, rightful, scriptural,
    significant, simon-pure, simple, sincere, single-hearted, solid,
    sound, square, square-dealing, square-shooting, standard, sterling,
    straight, straight-shooting, substantial, suggestive, sure,
    sure-enough, symptomatic, telling, textual, traditional,
    traditionalistic, true, true to life, true to nature,
    true to reality, true-blue, trustworthy, trusty, unadulterated,
    unaffected, unalloyed, unassumed, unassuming, uncolored,
    unconcocted, uncopied, uncounterfeited, undeniable, underived,
    undisguised, undisguising, undisputed, undistorted, undoubted,
    unexaggerated, unfabricated, unfanciful, unfeigned, unfeigning,
    unfictitious, unflattering, unimagined, unimitated, uninvented,
    unique, unpretended, unpretending, unqualified, unquestionable,
    unromantic, unsimulated, unspecious, unsynthetic, unvarnished,
    up-and-up, valid, verbal, verbatim, veridical, verisimilar,
    veritable, very, weighty, word-for-word

    Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0


bona fide, reliable, unquestionable, veritable


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