51³Ô¹Ï

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facticity

[fak-tis-i-tee]

noun

  1. the condition or quality of being a fact; factuality.



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51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins

Origin of facticity1

1940–45; fact + -icity ( -ic + -ity ), perhaps after authenticity
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Perhaps most significantly, "Midas Man" serves as a cautionary tale of sorts about the urgent need for facticity in contemporary cinema.

From

The American legal system, indeed any legal system, is a search for truth, facticity, conclusion, and resolution.

From

She said Psaki had a “facticity to her work that is characteristic of good press secretaries and it presupposes confidence. It presupposes access to the president. It presupposes an understanding of what the administration’s position is that proves to be true.â€

From

Because no institution of facticity can contain them.

From

So these little nuggets of problematic facticity—the inability of garlic to disempower a magnet or of goat’s blood to re-empower it—found their way into della Porta’s text.

From

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