the.com/false

The opposite of true, and the favorite excuse of every overconfident answer.

means Not in agreement with fact or reality; incorrect, fake, or deliberately deceptive.

from From Latin falsus, meaning deceived or feigned, the past participle of fallere, to deceive or trip up.

Logic coreOne of two truth values powering all computing.
Same rootFallacy, fail, and fault all share fallere.
Zero feelingIn code, false often equals plain old zero.
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