Use "fallacious" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "fallacious" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "fallacious", or refer to the context using the word "fallacious" in the English Dictionary.

1. Their main argument is fallacious.

2. Such a bill would be entirely fallacious.

3. His argument is based on fallacious reasoning.

4. Nothing is so fallacious as fact, except figures.

5. His fallacious reasoning annoyed all the people present.

6. A fallacious or illogical argument or conclusion.

7. Don't be misled by the fallacious advertisement.

8. Such an argument is misleading, if not wholly fallacious.

9. Nothing is so fallacious as facts, except figures.

10. Nothing can be more fallacious than this kind of argument.

11. A fallacious proof was accepted as correct for a decade.

12. Of course, continued Durieu(http://Sentencedict.com), this is a fallacious approach.

13. This is fallacious, as a study of esoteric teachings soon makes clear.

14. This inference is fallacious without reasonable evidence to support it.

15. Sometimes these views are based on reasoning that an economist would judge fallacious.

16. Fallacious assumption and method are piled upon each other like Pelion on Ossa.

17. The earlier belief that the Sun moves round the Earth was fallacious.

18. Each of the three links in this equation is fallacious , of course.

19. The idea that it is better to keep their identity a secret is fallacious.

20. This development was usually formally fallacious, as the philosopher G. E. Moore pointed out.

21. Common sense tells us, this kind of sound may have break biasedding is fallacious even.

22. While new forms appear constantly, the fallacious structure of the commercial form is gradually obvious.

23. English words for Captiosus include captious, deceitful, deceptive, sophistical, mendacious, dangerous, lying, hurtful, delusive and fallacious

24. The fact that dead men never breathed led to the fallacious deduction that his soul must be breath. . . .

25. 1400, capcyus, from Latin Captiosus "fallacious," from captionem (nominative captio) "a deceiving, fallacious argument," literally "a taking (in)," from captus, past participle of capere "to take, catch" (from PIE root *kap- "to grasp").

26. If we are to avoid this foundationalist conclusion we shall have to show that the regress argument is fallacious.

27. Captious comes from the Middle French word captieux, which is from the Latin word Captiosus meaning fallacious or deceiving

28. However, many of the severest critics of the RAWP formula seem to have adopted fallacious lines of argument.

29. Casuistry definition, specious, deceptive, or oversubtle reasoning, especially in questions of morality; fallacious or dishonest application of general principles; sophistry

30. In these circumstances facile and fallacious deductions about the consequences of having abolished the death penalty were bound to be rife.

31. He states that the argument that "Operation Vistula was the revenge for the slaughter of Poles by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army" in 1943–1944, was "fallacious and ethically inadmissible," as it invoked "the principle of collective guilt."

32. Amiss adjective wrong, mistaken, confused, false, inappropriate, rotten, incorrect, faulty, inaccurate, unsuitable, improper, defective, out of order, awry, erroneous, untoward, fallacious Their instincts warned them something was Amiss. wrong right, true, perfect, in order, correct, appropriate, suitable, accurate, proper, O.K

33. We are constrained to say that the entire argument of Mr Shanti Bhushan centring round Section 156, read with Chapter XIII, of the Code is fallacious; and the fallacy lies in the basic premise on which he sought to build his Argumentatious edifice.

34. I have computed the Anaretical Directions in full to the true giver of Life, not only to assist the genuine Student in his labors, but also to explain to him the vanity, and absurdity of selecting a false Prorogator, which is done in numberless cases, by which the fallacious Judgment of the Practiotioners is justly held in derision, and the