Fait Meaning in English
word
ˈfeɪt
FAYT
feɪt
FAYT
释义
A 'fait' is something that is true or has happened; a fact or event, often used formally or in legal contexts.
用法与细微差别
'Fait' is borrowed from French and is rare in everyday English. It is typically used in phrases like 'fait accompli' (an accomplished fact) or in formal, legal, or academic contexts to emphasize something established or completed.
Spanish: hechoPortuguese (BR): fatoPortuguese (PT): factoChinese (Simplified): 事实Chinese (Traditional): 事實Hindi: तथ्यArabic: حقيقةBengali: তথ্য - ঘটনাRussian: факт - событиеJapanese: 事実 - 出来事Vietnamese: sự thật - sự kiệnKorean: 사실 - 사건Turkish: olgu - gerçek - olayUrdu: حقیقت - واقعہIndonesian: fakta - peristiwa
例句
He accepted the fait without any argument.
basic
This report presents the fait as it is.
basic
A fait is something you cannot deny.
basic
The decision was a fait accompli before anyone could react.
natural
They treat the rumor as if it were a proven fait.
natural
Once the papers were signed, it was simply a fait that couldn't be changed.
natural