Absolutely not! "Verisimilitude" means resemblance to reality. The actors in a movie with verisimilitude will act as natural as possible; the dialogue will resemble real speech appropriate for the characters, including slang or dialect; the clothing will be appropriate for the time and place; everything will look as real as possible.
Verisimilitude is the believability of a fictional work. Does the performance and/or writing convince you that the action was possible even though you know it was fictional? Veri means truth. Simili means likeness. Tude is state of being. Having verisimilitude is having the appearance of truth.
Something having the mere appearance of being true or real.
The quality of appearing to be real. Stage sets are not real, but they can have an astonishing amount of verisimilitude.
The school of literature was also know as simply "realism".
Not exactly. Verisimilitude is the appearance of being true or real. Therefore, verisimilitude does not require a suspension of disbelief.
In verisimilitude the people are not directly voting for their individual of chose.
Your face lacks verisimilitude is you are a dragon. The novel is lacking v
I can't fully answer your question for I also don't know the answer myself. Anyhow, I found this link which has 3 (examples of) sentences that uses the word 'verisimilitude'. I hope this would help you. http://dictionary2.classic.reference.com/wordoftheday/archive/2006/09/06.html
Quote from Gilbert and Sullivan (The Mikado)"gives an air of verisimilitude to an otherwise bald and unconvincing argument". I always used to say at work "If you want to convince someone of your facts - have them typed. Typing gives any case an air of verisimilitude" PS and it is spelled verisimilitude with 4 i's
realism
vare-is-imilitood
well one example would be...the suspect's story lacks verismilitude. or you coulds say...Her guilty face showed her lack of verisimilitude. **hope this helps:)
artificial, lacking verisimilitude
The cast of Verisimilitude - 2007 includes: Blake Fertig as Kelly Pierce Tara Halverson as Ellen Thomas Marquez as Gary
1595-1605 Quality of seeming true
Rory Morse has written: 'Verisimilitude'