hypocritic
1Hypocritic — Hyp o*crit ic, a. See {Hypocritical}. Swift. [1913 Webster] …
2hypocritic — (adj.) 1530s, from Gk. hypokritikos “acting a part, pretending” (see HYPOCRISY (Cf. hypocrisy)) …
3hypocritic — adj. insincere, duplicitous, false, two faced …
4hypocritic — a.; (also hypocritical) 1. Pharisaical, canting, sanctimonious. 2. Dissembling, insincere, false, hollow, deceitful, faithless …
5hypocritic — hyp·o·crit·ic …
6hypocritic — adjective see hypocritical …
7Woolf, Douglas — ▪ American author born March 23, 1922, New York, N.Y., U.S. died Jan. 18, 1992, Urbana, Ill. American author of gently comic fiction about people unassimilated into materialistic, technological society. The heir of a prominent… …
8hypocritical — 1540s (implied in hypocritically), from HYPOCRITIC (Cf. hypocritic), which was used in the same sense, + AL (Cf. al) (1). Middle English used simple hypocrite as the adjective (c.1400) as well as the noun …
9Jerusalem (Mendelssohn) — Title page of the first edition (Berlin: Friedrich Maurer, 1783) …
10Douglas Woolf — (March 23, 1922 January 18, 1992) was an American author of short stories, novels and book reviews. Woolf studied at Harvard University from 1939 until 1942. He also studied at the University of New Mexico, and the University of Arizona.[1].… …