Yuan
Native speakers: Do you use the word “lier”? Or even it’s not a English word?
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الإجابات · 8
1
Yes it's an English word no, nobody uses it.
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1
A lier would something or someone lying in a horizontal position. However, I wouldn't say it's used. I can't say I've ever read it or heard it and Google yields few results. It is common as part of the word 'outlier' though.
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Interesting that other English speakers are commenting that nobody uses it. I'm from Western Canada, and we use it often to refer to someone who habitually lies.
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I don't believe it's an English word. So I'm going to check a dictionary. It's not in the American Heritage dictionary. Wait: I was wrong. it IS in the Merriam-Webster Third, Unabridged. "Lier (1): one that lies (as in ambush). Lier (2), archaic: var of LEHR." The people who are most likely to say "Is that a word?" are Scrabble players, and there is a special dictionary for Scrabble players. It's compiled by Merriam-Webster for the company that manufactures the Scrabble game. According to the Official Scrabble Players' Dictionary, Sixth Edition. And it's in there, too. "LIER  n  pl. LIERS one that lies or reclines." It's also in the competing Scrabble authority, the "Tournament Word List." So I guess it is a real English word, and it is legal to play in Scrabble. However, I haven't been able to find any examples of real use. I don't think you should use it, because it is very rare, and almost everyone who reads it will think it is a misspelling of "liar."
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i have never used it
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