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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
feign
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
feign interest (=pretend to be interested)
▪ Ted scanned the report, feigning interest.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Bernstein returned to his desk, feigning unconcern.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ At decision-making time these consequences are simply left unmentioned, allowing organizational leaders to feign surprise when qualitative costs finally assert themselves.
▪ I know I should be kind and concerned and that I should at least feign pathos.
▪ I saw that her reluctance to be taken had been feigned, or part-feigned.
▪ The silence I feigned does not mean you are not in my thoughts.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Feign

Feign \Feign\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Feigned; p. pr. & vb. n. Feigning.] [OE. feinen, F. feindre (p. pr. feignant), fr. L. fingere; akin to L. figura figure,and E. dough. See Dough, and cf. Figure, Faint, Effigy, Fiction.]

  1. To give a mental existence to, as to something not real or actual; to imagine; to invent; hence, to pretend; to form and relate as if true.

    There are no such things done as thou sayest, but thou feignest them out of thine own heart.
    --Neh. vi. 8.

    The poet Did feign that Orpheus drew trees, stones, and floods.
    --Shak.

  2. To represent by a false appearance of; to pretend; to counterfeit; as, to feign a sickness.
    --Shak.

  3. To dissemble; to conceal. [Obs.]
    --Spenser.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
feign

A 17c. respelling of fain, fein, from Middle English feinen, feynen "disguise or conceal (deceit, falsehood, one's real meaning); dissemble, make false pretenses, lie; pretend to be" (c.1300), from Old French feindre "hesitate, falter; be indolent; lack courage; show weakness," also transitive, "to shape, fashion; depict, represent; feign, pretend; imitate" (12c.), from Latin fingere "to touch, handle; devise; fabricate, alter, change" (see fiction).\n

\nFrom late 14c. as "simulate (an action, an emotion, etc.)." Related: Feigned; feigning. The older spelling is that of faint, feint, but this word acquired a -g- in imitation of the French present participle stem feign- and the Latin verb.

Wiktionary
feign

vb. 1 To make a false copy or version of; to counterfeit. 2 To imagine; to invent; to pretend. 3 To make an action as if doing one thing, but actually doing another, for example to trick an opponent. 4 To hide or conceal.

WordNet
feign
  1. v. make believe with the intent to deceive; "He feigned that he was ill"; "He shammed a headache" [syn: sham, pretend, affect, dissemble]

  2. make a pretence of; "She assumed indifference, even though she was seething with anger"; "he feigned sleep" [syn: simulate, assume, sham]

Wikipedia
Feign (album)

Feign is a live album by saxophonist Tim Berne's Hard Cell which was recorded in 2005 and released on Berne's Screwgun label.

Usage examples of "feign".

Then the old woman rendring out like sighes, began to speake in this sort : My daughter take a good heart unto you, and bee not afeared at feigned and strange visions and dreams, for as the visions of the day are accounted false and untrue, so the visions of the night doe often change contrary.

Dyne, his scrawny arms strapped to a pair of Y-shaped branches, eyes girlishly aflutter, feigned to yield his hairless body into the ecstatic admixture of bliss and pain of which he fancied heaven was justly composed.

As for Lady Afy, he execrated the greenhornism which had made him feign a passion, and then get caught where he meant to capture.

He had tried several times to speak to her while in Hes, but always she had feigned tiredness or some pressing business, and she never seemed to require his bodyguard services anymore, the way she had during their first weeks together.

The same may be said of feigned insanity, aphonia, deaf-mutism, and loss of memory.

A few moments later Sigurd Ring awoke from his feigned sleep, and after telling Frithiof that he had recognized him from the first, had tested him in many ways, and had always found his honor fully equal to his vaunted courage, he bade him be patient a little longer, for his end was very near, and said that he would die happy if he could leave Ingeborg, his infant heir, and his kingdom in such good hands.

They feign a lack of interest in magic, and indeed some of them declare that they know my secrets, but I have had one or two moments when, gratifyingly, I have seen genuine bafflement in their expressions.

On the other hand, if one or both were skillful enough to feign the biomarkers of veracity while lying, that is exactly what I would expect to detect.

When he came back, the bondswoman looked at him with feigned disinterest.

We teach them to express affection, or at least to feign affection, by buying appropriate gifts for the special people in their lives.

He was rather addicted to gallantry, and the empress, who always called him master feigned not to notice it, because she did not want the world to know that her charms could no longer captivate her royal spouse, and the more so that the beauty of her numerous family was generally admired.

I feigned a passionate desire, and I could see that I should not have much trouble in gaining my suit.

Donna Ignazia feigned to be persuaded and asked her lover to sit down, but she did not speak another word to him, confining her remarks to me, saying how much she had enjoyed the ball, and how kind I had been to take her cousins.

As I did not see Leah at supper-time I imagined that she was feigning illness to avoid meeting me, and I felt very much obliged to her on this account.

It was some years since Stephen had heard Jack reprove one of his officers, and he was much struck by the remarkable advance in efficacity, by the impersonal, God-like, severe authority that could not possibly be feigned or assumed by any man who did not naturally possess it.