fabricate
How to Use Fabricate
Learner’s notesIn plain EnglishTo build something physically, or to make up something false and pass it off as real.
In everyday use "fabricate" almost always implies dishonesty (fabricate a story/excuse); the neutral "manufacture" sense is more common in technical or industrial writing.
Word Forms
fabricated past tense, fabricates singular
Fill the Gap
Can you complete this real example?
The company _____ steel components for the aerospace industry.
Etymology
From Latin fabricare, "to build or construct," from fabrica, "workshop" — the sense of "make up a lie" developed later in English.