The other was the Initiative Law Group, a fictitious name registered to Ketcher.
From the stltoday.com
He's so popular as a fictitious president that he's contemplating a run himself!
From the philly.com
Has John Abbot, patriarch of the fictitious Genoa City, truly left the building?
From the latimes.com
This article is about the fictitious force related to rotating reference frames.
From the en.wikipedia.org
For a mathematical formulation see Mathematical derivation of fictitious forces.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Subjects even go on to embellish these fictitious events with their own details.
From the newscientist.com
Wright was arrested after a traffic stop when he gave officers a fictitious name.
From the delawareonline.com
Punctuating these verses is a series of poems that focus on fictitious syndromes.
From the post-gazette.com
At times, Puntriano submitted fictitious invoices for pallets that never shipped.
From the stltoday.com
More examples
Fabricated: formed or conceived by the imagination; "a fabricated excuse for his absence"; "a fancied wrong"; "a fictional character"
Assumed: adopted in order to deceive; "an assumed name"; "an assumed cheerfulness"; "a fictitious address"; "fictive sympathy"; "a pretended interest"; "a put-on childish voice"; "sham modesty"
(fictitiously) in a false manner intended to mislead
Not real; invented; contrived
(fictitiousness) The state of being fictitious
False, feigned, pretended.
Artificial or imagined, not true (like a fiction novel instead of a nonfiction history book).