UNPKG

word-vault

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A lightweight JavaScript package for English word definitions and collections.

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{ "term": "fiction", "partOfSpeech": "noun", "ox3000": true, "cefr": "a2", "definitions": [ { "senseNumber": 1, "definition": "a type of literature that describes imaginary people and events, not real ones", "labels": "(US English)", "cefr": "a2", "ox3000": true, "examples": [ { "text": "a **work of **popular **fiction**" }, { "text": "historical/romantic/crime fiction" }, { "text": "to write/read fiction" }, { "text": "a crime **fiction writer**" }, { "text": "She has written novels and short fiction." }, { "text": "a well-known writer of crime fiction" }, { "text": "She has written over 20 works of fiction." } ], "topics": ["Literature and writing"], "collocations": { "adjective": ["contemporary", "modern", "classic"], "verb + fiction": ["publish", "write", "create"], "phrases": ["a work of fiction", "a writer of fiction"] } }, { "senseNumber": 2, "definition": "a thing that is invented or imagined and is not true", "sensetop": "fiction that…", "examples": [ { "text": "Don't believe what she says—it's pure fiction!" }, { "text": "For years he managed to keep up the fiction that he was not married.", "contextForm": "fiction that…" }, { "text": "She still tries to maintain the fiction that she is happily married." }, { "text": "Fact and fiction became all jumbled up in his report of the robbery." } ], "collocations": { "adjective": ["pure", "legal"], "verb + fiction": ["keep up", "maintain", "create"], "phrases": ["fact and fiction"] } }, { "senseNumber": null, "definition": "used to say that things that actually happen are often more surprising than stories that are invented", "labels": "(saying)", "examples": [] } ], "pronunciations": { "uk": [ { "pronunciation": "/ˈfɪkʃn/", "audio": "fi/fiction/fiction__gb_1.mp3" } ], "us": [ { "pronunciation": "/ˈfɪkʃn/", "audio": "fi/fiction/fiction__us_2.mp3" } ] }, "wordOrigin": "late Middle English (in the sense ‘invented statement’): via Old French from Latin fictio(n-), from fingere ‘form, contrive’. Compare with feign and figment." }