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counterfactual
[koun-ter-fak-choo-uhl]
noun
a conditional statement the first clause of which expresses something contrary to fact, as “If I had known.”
counterfactual
/ ˌkauntəˈfæktʃʊəl /
adjective
expressing what has not happened but could, would, or might under differing conditions
noun
a conditional statement in which the first clause is a past tense subjunctive statement expressing something contrary to fact, as in
if she had hurried she would have caught the bus
Other Word Forms
- counterfact noun
- counterfactually adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of counterfactual1
Example Sentences
I think an oligarch class is going to deliver us a combination of both, where the AI will not only create reliance on it but give us bad, counterfactual information about important issues.
That effacement tries to create a counterfactual absurdity.
We can't be certain because the results depend heavily on the method chosen by researchers for measuring the "counterfactual", i.e what would have happened to UK exports had the country stayed in the EU.
These so-called counterfactual scenarios are alternative possibilities for past events, i.e. scenarios that did not occur but could have happened.
They presented no evidence, only aspersions and suspicion and counterfactual speculation, but in Russia’s eyes the culprit was clear: Ukraine.
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