figment
ملفق
definition
noun
it really was Ross and not a figment of her overheated imagination
a thing that someone believes to be real but that exists only in their imagination.
translation of 'figment'
noun
خيالي,
ملفق
example
We must pretend the bombs don't exist and the explosions are a 'figment' of our imagination.
Wallach believes it was probably a 'figment' of his imagination and that what matters is how proudly he told her his story.
it really was Ross and not a 'figment' of her overheated imagination
He seems less like a real person than like a 'figment' of Bobby's imagination.
Sam is uncertain as to whether this strange new world is real or just a 'figment' of his imagination.
So at first she did not even know if it was real or a 'figment' of her imagination.
it really was Ross and not a 'figment' of her overheated imagination
Funny how all that seems like a 'figment' of the imagination, almost as if it never existed.
They are no longer just 'figments' of our imagination,’ he stressed.
She knew now that these visions were not 'figments' of her imagination.
‘But vampires are 'figments' of imagination, they aren't real,’ she said with a laugh.
No matter how real they seemed, they were just 'figments' of your imagination.
We can find animals in clouds and patterns in the stockmarket, but they are 'figments' of our imagination.
Strangely, none of the people who should have been there were there, but were instead replaced by 'figments' of my imagination.
Though some of the things he saw - or thought he saw - were indeed real, most of it were just 'figments' of his ever-active imagination.
The recent analysis, however, suggests that the events depicted were horrifyingly real and not 'figments' of artists' imagination.
They were unpleasant sometimes, but no more so than being in this prison, and they seemed too real to be merely 'figments' of his imagination.
Within the realms of a dressing room, the concepts of political correctness and employees' rights are but 'figments' of the imagination.
If you didn't see them on the news pages of respected newspapers, you would think they were 'figments' of a fevered imagination.
Which of the following three courses are actually funded by the taxpayer, and which are the 'figments' of my imagination?
Or are they 'figments' of our imagination, as it were?
The mothers begin to suspect that their daughters might be 'figments' of their respective imaginations.
Credits: Google Translate