debunking

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de·bunk

 (dē-bŭngk′)
tr.v. de·bunked, de·bunk·ing, de·bunks
To expose or ridicule the falseness, sham, or exaggerated claims of: debunk a supposed miracle drug.

de·bunk′er n.
Word History: You can readily see that debunk is constructed from the prefix de-, meaning "to remove," and the word bunk. But what is the origin of the word bunk, denoting the nonsense that is to be removed? Bunk came from a place where much bunk has originated, the United States Congress. During the 16th Congress (1819-1821), Felix Walker, representative from the district in North Carolina including Buncombe County, delivered a particularly pointless speech intended merely to convince his constituency that he was making a difference in Washington. His harried colleagues asked him to desist, but he nattered on despite their protests—he was speaking not to Congress, he explained, but "to Buncombe." Buncombe, respelled bunkum and later shortened to bunk, thus became synonymous with claptrap. The answer to all this bunk came in 1923 when William E. Woodward, a writer with a reputation for giving the blunt facts about respected US institutions, coined the term debunk in a best-selling novel called Bunk.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Noun1.debunking - the exposure of falseness or pretensions; "the debunking of religion has been too successful"
exposure - presentation to view in an open or public manner; "the exposure of his anger was shocking"
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
Debunking the report via his Twitter handle on Monday, Kwankwaso wrote: 'A fake news is being circulated on the social media that I am leaving the PDP.
Summary: When people are encouraged to think extensively about the false information when they encounter it, the information is more resistant to debunking later, and its effect on future beliefs persists
But even after a detailed debunking, misinformation can be hard to completely eliminate, said the study published in the journal Psychological Science.
Two of the most prominent evolutionary debunking arguments are Sharon Street's Darwinian dilemma for normative realism and Alvin Plantinga's evolutionary argument against atheism.
Italy's Lies: Debunking History's Lies So That Italy Might Become a "Normal Country" offers a volatile title and a biting examination of the social and political myths of modern Italy and how ongoing corruption of the nation's ruling class may be why it's never been 'normal'.
Chapter 19 returns to paranormal pseudoscience and gives it some more excellent debunking. Chapter 20 presents his objections to laws that go too far to prevent wrongful convictions (I could not entirely agree with him because I live in Texas, USA, where wrongful convictions are way too easy to win despite the laws he thinks go too far).
* SIR - While climate-change alarmists will this week amplify their call for a worldwide tax on CO2 emissions in the name of preventing man-made global-warming - reality is again debunking dire proclamations.
Debunking Glenn Beck: How to Save America from Media Pundits and Propagandists is not just a hard counter to pro-corporate political pundit Glenn Beckand his so-called "conservative libertarianism" - rather, Debunking Glenn Beck considers Beck to be only a symptom of the problem, no matter how thoroughly his arguments are deconstructed or countered.
The HCG True Diet has devoted a new section of its website to debunking certain hcg diet dangers and myths.
Christopher Howard, The Welfare State Nobody Knows: Debunking Myths About U.S.
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