Lewis Short
fictĭo (noun F) : fingo (post-Aug.; esp. freq. in Quint.).
* A making, fashioning, forming, formation (cf.: confictio, figmentum): (animalis) fictio a capite sumit exordium,Lact. Opif. D. 12: hominis,i. e. creation,id. 4, 4; 2, 9: nominum fictio adjectis, detractis, mutatis litteris,Quint. 6, 3, 53; 8, 3, 19; Ὀνοματοποιῖ́α, id est fictio nominis, id. 8, 6, 31; 9, 1, 5: Furium, veterem poëtam, dedecorasse linguam Latinam hujuscemodi vocum fictionibus, quae, etc., Gell. 18, 11, 2.
* In partic.
* A feigning, counterfeiting, disguising: in figura totius voluntatis fictio est, apparens magis quam confessa,Quint. 9, 2, 46: poëtarum,fictions,Lact. 1, 21 fin.: fictiones personarum, quae προσωποποιῖ́αι dicuntur, Quint. 9, 2, 29: personae,id. 9, 3, 89; 11, 1, 39; Vulg. Sap. 7, 13.
* Rhet. t. t., an assumed or fictitious case, a supposition, fiction: adhuc est subtilior illa ex simili translatio, cum, quod in alia re fieri solet, in aliam mutuantur. Ea dicatur sane fictio,Quint. 6, 3, 61; cf.: duci argumenta non a confessis tantum, sed etiam a fictione, quod Graeci καθ̓ ὑπόθεσιν vocant, id. 5, 10, 95 Spald.: est et illa ex ironia fictio, qua usus est C. Caesar, etc.,id. 6, 3, 91.
* Jurid. t. t.: fictio legis,a fictitious assumption in a case, a fiction,Gai. Inst. 3, 56; Dig. 35, 2, 1, § 1; 18; 41, 3, 15. For an account of the fictions in use in the formulas of the Roman law, v. Gai. Inst. 4, 32-38; cf. Savigny, Du Droit Romain, 5, pp. 76-84.
Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary