English edit

Etymology edit

From pseudo- +‎ fact.

Noun edit

pseudofact (plural pseudofacts)

  1. Something that seems to be a fact, but is not
    • 1988 February 26, Jonathan Rosenbaum, “Form Counts”, in Chicago Reader[1]:
      The film complicates matters by casting Christine Hebert (a sometime underground filmmaker in her own right) as Pizzorno, with Moullet playing himself, thereby juxtaposing pseudofiction with pseudofact in a way that undermines the rhetorical strategies of both, leaving only a sweet, tragicomic pathos as residue.
    • 1981, United States Political Science Documents[2], page 311:
      It is argued that the conclusion of previous research efforts that class voting in Canada is virtually nonexistent is a pseudofact stemming from theoretical and methodological problems.