English edit

Etymology edit

fake +‎ -er

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

faker (plural fakers)

  1. One who fakes something.
  2. An impostor or impersonator.
    • 2001 June 23, Sonic Team USA, Sonic Adventure 2, Sega, published 2001:
      Sonic: I found you, faker!
  3. (military, by extension) A friendly unit (usually aircraft) that acts as a hostile unit in a military exercise.
    • 2011, APP-6C: NATO Joint Military Symbology, page 555:
      faker: A friendly track acting as a hostile for exercise purposes. (STANAG 1241)
  4. (obsolete) A thief.
  5. (obsolete) A peddler of petty things.
    • 1859, Snowden's Magistrates Assistant, page 497:
      He has been lagged for beaker hunting, was a mushroom faker [umbrella seller], has been on the steel for snamming a wedge sneezer; []
  6. A snake oil salesman; one who makes exaggerated claims about a product he sells.
    • 1906, Clifton Rodman Wooldridge, The Grafters of America: Who They are and how They Work, page 248:
      Yet the faker is not an unpopular visitor to the country fair. On the contrary, a country fair at which was not heard the stentorian shouts of the faker to "come on, boys; here's the chance to make your fortune," would be considered a dismal failure.
    • 1909 May, G. Frank Lydston, “Honor to Whom Honor is Due”, in The Medical Standard, volume 32, page 248:
      All the doctor has to do nowadays is to read the labels on the bottles and boxes of samples the faker brings him.
    • 1912 June, Locomotive Engineers Journal, volume 46, number 6, page 535:
      Business interests citizens against the food adulterator are severely hampered and injured and the "patent-medicine” faker.

Derived terms edit

Translations edit

See also edit

Adjective edit

faker

  1. comparative form of fake: more fake.
    • 2016, Laura Stampler, Little Black Dresses, Little White Lies, page 147:
      The name sounds faker than fake.
    • 2018, Jessica Brody, Better You Than Me, page 7:
      He returns my smile, although his is probably faker than mine.
    • 2022, Amanda Elliot, Sadie on a Plate, page 155:
      She's faker than the plastic food in the pictures on the McDonald's menu.

Anagrams edit

French edit

Etymology edit

Borrowed from English fake (to feign).

Pronunciation edit

Verb edit

faker

  1. (transitive, Quebec, colloquial) to fake; to feign (to pretend to do something)

Conjugation edit