9 adjectives to describe falsifications

I am afraid lest that substitution of a shell (a flat falsification of the history) for the household implement, as it stood at first, was a kind of tub thrown out to the beast, or rather thrown out for him.

Misrepresentation N. misrepresentation, distortion, caricatura^, exaggeration; daubing &c v.; bad likeness, daub, sign painting; scratch, caricature; anamorphosis^; burlesque, falsification, misstatement; parody, lampoon, take-off, travesty.

And as if the above were insufficient to prove that the German Imperial Chancellor was guilty of conscious falsification, Austria put one more nail in the coffin of European peace on September 24th, 1914, when it issued an official communication to the Press, reiterating that Austria had never dreamed of departing from the attitude which she first took up.

This philosophical and patriotic confidence on the part of Chancellor de l'Hospital was fated to receive some cruel falsifications.

The great majority of these errors were not the result of accident: they were the result of deliberate falsification.

First, no parishioner's acts, whether done in an official or a private capacity, were ever quite safe from misrepresentation, or downright falsification by his enemies, for secret denunciation to wardens or sidemen (or to the ordinary himself) by any one might start a proceeding against the person denounced and force him upon oath to disclose the most private, the most confidential, matters.

He preserved, too, that characteristic of the child, when confronted with a difficult and disagreeable situation, of saying anything that came into his head which seemed to offer a solution; the child does not invent an elaborate falsification; it simply says whatever will untie the knot quickest, without reference to facts.

It is no record of the truth; it is not a romance or a fable, artfully constructed and elegantly told; it isto use that plain language which the occasion authorizes and demandsa barefaced, but awkward falsification of history,so awkward, that it has cost us little trouble to detect it,so barefaced, that it has been a duty, though, of course, a painful one, to expose it.

In an unscrupulous falsification of the tradition, Confucius declared that this principle was followed in early times.

9 adjectives to describe  falsifications