Word for the day belie

belie


[bih-lahy]


verb (used with object)


1. to show to be false; contradict:


His trembling hands belied his calm voice.


2. to misrepresent:


The newspaper belied the facts.


3. to act unworthily according to the standards of (a tradition, one's ancestry, one's faith, etc.).


4. Archaic. to lie about; slander.
 

I don't think I've ever had an occasion to use it, and most of the people I know would say "What? Belie?" It's two syllables; that's one too many for folks I know.
 

Josiah, I took the scenic route via Honolulu, HI; Ann Arbor, MI; Milwaukee, WI; Huntington, WV; Farmington, NM; Las Cruces, NM; El Paso, TX; San Francisco, CA; Stuttgart, Germany; Tampa, FL and Berea, KY with a few round trips in between.

Dang! No wonder I'm tired.

We not only have TV here, Rachel Maddow is auto-tuned on mine. Our down-home atmosphere belies the fact that Atlanta is the sparkling, sophisticated and cosmopolitan Center of the South. Heck, we have electricity and even flush toilets! This is a happenin' place unless there's an ice storm in winter.
 
Hawaii ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh makes me melt! We went twice once for our honey moon and then for our 5 year. I love it and I want to live there with all my heart on Maui.
 
I wanted to be Molly Ivins. She died. It's a good thing I didn't get to be Molly Ivins. I also wanted to be Erma Bombeck. She died, too. It's a good thing I didn't get to be Erma Bombeck. Same deal with Phyllis Diller in the early years. She turned crude and shrewish. When she did that, I didn't want to be Phyllis Diller anymore. I didn't want to be her anymore long before she died so it's all good.

BTW, my command of the language and extensive vocabulary belie the fact that I flunked Latin:D Twice!


ETA: Hey! In my next life maybe I could be Rachel Maddow! Yeah. That's it. I wanna be Rachel Maddow.
 
I do have a name. To most Americans it's unpronounceable and impossible to spell. Andree. Sorry, my laptop won't allow for l'accent aigu so my name looks like it's Ann dree. Ugh. Andre is a very common man's name in the South so why Southerners can't grasp that's it's merely the feminine version is beyond me. I get called Anndree, Andrea, Audrey, Adrienne...the list goes on. They seem to understand the difference between Rene and Renee, Michele and Michelle. I have a sister named Michele. Go figure.

The "X" in GeorgiaXplant is a kind of shorthand for "trans"...I'm a transplant.
 

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