Crossword clues for debunking
Wiktionary
n. The act of showing something to be false (or bunkum) vb. (present participle of debunk English)
WordNet
n. the exposure of falseness or pretensions; "the debunking of religion has been too successful" [syn: repudiation]
Usage examples of "debunking".
Modernize the style of this, and it might have come out of one of the debunking war books of the nineteen-twenties.
Partly that was the effect of the war of 1914-18, which succeeded in debunking both Science, Progress and civilized man.
If there was one thing that the British intelligentsia were committed to, it was the debunking version of war, the theory that war is all corpses and latrines and never leads to any good result.
From what I could hear he was repeating his conviction as to the medieval age and Bantu origin of the central African ruin system, and was lightly and amusingly debunking my own writings.
It was one of several television series produced by an organization called REALI-TV -- including Promises, Promises, devoted to follow-up analyses of unfulfilled campaign pledges at local, state, and national levels, and Bamboozles and Baloney, a weekly debunking of what were said to be widespread prejudices, propaganda, and myths.
It was one of several television series produced by an organization called REALI-TV-- including Promises, Promises, devoted to follow-up analyses of unfulfilled campaign pledges at local, state, and national levels, and Bamboozles and Baloney, a weekly debunking of what were said to be widespread prejudices, propaganda, and myths.
Our time is burdened under the cumulative weight of successive debunkings of our conceits: We're Johnny-come-latelies.
It was not, of course, immediately accepted there were many false starts, renunciations, debunkings, persecutions, and attacks of what seemed massive inertia.
There were many false starts, renunciations, debunkings, persecu-tions, and periods of what seemed massive inertia.
And he perpetuates erroneous information such as Rowling living in an unheated apartment while writing the first book (in the aforementioned Newsworld interview, Rowling makes a point of debunking the mistaken mythology built up by the press of which the unheated apartment is a prime example).
To the sceptic, their quest may ultimately rest on a delusion, but debunking is hardly likely to be an effective rhetorical device for their rationalist project of getting [people] to recognize what appears to the sceptic as mistaken or magical thinking.