Insincere
31ncère — insincère sincère …
32Bunkum — insincere talk; claptrap; humbug (alteration of Buncombe, a county in the US, in North Carolina, from its Congressional representative s phrase, talking for Buncombe ) …
33Japanese — insincere Etiquette in Japan decrees that you should never indicate dissatisfaction to a stranger: Unhappy, indeed, Japanese, laughter all round. (A. Clark, 2000) …
34insincerely — insincere ► ADJECTIVE ▪ not expressing genuine feelings. DERIVATIVES insincerely adverb insincerity noun (pl. insincerities) …
35insincerities — insincere ► ADJECTIVE ▪ not expressing genuine feelings. DERIVATIVES insincerely adverb insincerity noun (pl. insincerities) …
36insincerity — insincere ► ADJECTIVE ▪ not expressing genuine feelings. DERIVATIVES insincerely adverb insincerity noun (pl. insincerities) …
37disingenuous — I (Roget s IV) modif. Syn. insincere, uncandid, deceitful, calcuLating; see dishonest 1 , hypocritical , sly 1 . II (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) a. insincere, deceitful, lying, artful, false, uncandid, dishonest, crooked, underhanded, two faced.… …
38glad hand — n. warm hearty welcome; warm welcome but in many cases insincere; warm handshake that may be insincere v. give a person a warm handshake that may be insincere; welcome warmly …
39lip service — noun an expression of agreement that is not supported by real conviction • Syn: ↑hypocrisy • Derivationally related forms: ↑hypocritical (for: ↑hypocrisy) • Hypernyms: ↑pretense, ↑ …
40INQUISITION — INQUISITION, special permanent tribunal of the medieval Catholic Church, established to investigate and combat heresy. The Early Institution Although the Inquisition was established by Pope gregory ix , it owed its name to the procedure… …