No. Unauthentic is the correct adjective.
It doesn't mean anything because the spelling is incorrect. The correct spelling is apocryphal and it means of doubtful or dubious authorship, inauthentic, or of questionable authenticity.
Fake are inauthentic are antonyms for authenticity.
is my names are a correct English
Yes it is correct english
Authenticism is the belief in the superiority of the authentic over the inauthentic.
In the UK, the correct English is known as either Standard English or The Queen's English.
Mommy is correct in American English, Mummy is correct in English.
The correct way to phrase this question in English would be: "Are these correct?"
They are synonyms, so either is appropriate it would seem. Personally I use inauthentic. I wonder which is older in use ... consider Shakespeare and more distant times and which word was used.
Clearly you aren't writing in English to correct you, so I don't see why I should wright in English to correct me.
"Correct" in English is corretto in Italian.
it is not correct English, you rather say still