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truly
[ troo-lee ]
adverb
- in accordance with fact or truth; truthfully:
Whatever his faults, he lived a life that can be truly said to be significant.
- legitimately; by right:
Those assets and properties are no longer truly his.
We're truly sorry for the delay.
- to the fullest extent or degree:
The property should be viewed to truly appreciate all it has to offer.
- to a great extent or degree:
The film is littered with some truly dreadful sequences.
- sincerely (a conventional term used at the end of a letter):
Yours truly, Allan Burns.
- exactly; accurately; correctly:
The clock runs truly.
To truly worship God, we must know Him and not be ignorant of His glorious nature.
- indeed; without doubt; verily:
Truly, she is a fair-haired angel.
- Archaic. faithfully; loyally.
truly
/ 藞迟谤耻藧濒瑟 /
adverb
- in a true, just, or faithful manner
- (intensifier)
a truly great man
- indeed; really
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of truly1
Example Sentences
Those risks, however, are there - and with an administration as unpredictable and fast-moving as this one, the potential for a crisis never truly goes away.
If being alone is the eternal problem, as Sade and Mina seem to acknowledge, love, in all its gnarly reality, is the only way to be truly seen.
鈥淔or the 40th anniversary, we鈥檝e been talking about, 鈥榃hat could we do that truly engages all the people that love film?鈥
As the scale of the disruption became clear, residents of Madrid were warned to stay put, keep off the roads and not to call emergency services unless "truly urgent".
And despite what his famous father Deion Sanders proclaimed, the Colorado quarterback did not show truly elite, NFL talent in college.
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