Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
fictionalization .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word fictionalizations.
Examples
-
It treats Tarzan as a real person, and the ERB books as "fictionalizations" of episodes in that real person's life... but this approach doesn't do as much violence to the ERB books as one might think from such a description.
Adventure Week #4: Tarzan of the Apes Scott Parker 2009
-
When it comes to fictionalizations or loose interpretations of her life, the actress -- currently in rehab -- is notoriously sensitive.
The non-Lindsay Lohan biopic: As confused and tortured as the real thing Liz Kelly 2010
-
Maybe not as much in Vlad Taltos et al. which strikes me as more working off the Westernized fictionalizations of folklore and history, but particularly in Agyar.
-
He also probably didn't use a silver bullet at all - something that was included in later fictionalizations, not in contemporary accounts.
-
He also probably didn't use a silver bullet at all - something that was included in later fictionalizations, not in contemporary accounts.
-
He also probably didn't use a silver bullet at all - something that was included in later fictionalizations, not in contemporary accounts.
October 2009 2009
-
The information about its contents was documented extensively in a number of places, so I was well aware of the factual anomalies and flat-out fictionalizations relating to Sandy Berger, Madeleine Albright, and Bill Clinton.
Rachel Sklar: "Path To 9/11" Tough On Bush Administration? Not By A Long Shot. 2008
-
Despite the fictionalizations, the story feels uncomfortably real, because Bicke is a kind of man who is all too common: out of place in the world, but determined to succeed, and with this determination he only succeeds in making everything worse.
Archive 2005-04-01 2005
-
Despite the fictionalizations, the story feels uncomfortably real, because Bicke is a kind of man who is all too common: out of place in the world, but determined to succeed, and with this determination he only succeeds in making everything worse.
-
Now the trade paperback edition ($14.95, Harper Perennial) offers substantial additional content, plus a foreword in which James Ellroy, who wrote one of the most famous fictionalizations of the case, declares himself a convert to Hodel's theory.
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.