释义 |
Definition of genuinely in English: genuinelyadverb ˈdʒɛnjʊɪnliˈdʒɛnjuənli 1In a truthful way. they speak genuinely about how proud they are Example sentencesExamples - Despite being a genuinely ill hypochondriac, he wrote about aristocrats, chamber music, church steeples, Parisian high life, snobbery, and interior design.
- Greene is genuinely asking, in both book and film, "What are the foundations of moral behavior in a world where personal and social values have been so eroded?"
- Would it be much better if I prayed genuinely to worship God?
- I genuinely can't remember.
- He genuinely thought, and I have absolutely no reason to disbelieve him, that that insurgent was already dead.
- Children genuinely form bonds with and nurture a deep affection for these toys, the way past generations did for teddy bears.
- This edition will instruct and inspire all who use it and help them learn what it means to be, and to remain, a genuinely confessing Lutheran.
- I am a consumer like everyone else, but there has to be a point when consumption ends and one has to genuinely invest oneself in life.
- They are gasping for politicians to genuinely communicate with them.
- We help those who genuinely cannot compete, and we provide opportunity for those who can.
- 1.1 Used to emphasize sincerity or seriousness.
both parties genuinely believe they're right it is genuinely an honour to be on the campaign Example sentencesExamples - We genuinely felt that we could not not have a particular piece, even if it made for a cleaner, more pristine kind of show.
- There she worked in the studio incessantly, so much that her teacher, Alexander Yacovlev, genuinely believed she had time for little else in her life, let alone a boyfriend.
- As a character, the sheriff elevates that film because he genuinely believes in hard-line justice.
- The likelihood that the works will be received as "self-portraits"—as the artist genuinely intends them—is highly questionable.
- He was portrayed as a man who genuinely believed in the moral benefits of separating half-caste children from their parents.
- Eschewing passive voyeurism or manipulative choreography, the photographer genuinely wanted to understand and befriend these artists.
- With a complex about being a "little New York," Torontonians seem to genuinely think that theirs is the best—and sometimes the only—city on the planet.
- All 28 argue that they had a lawful excuse to destroy the crop because they genuinely believed that neighboring organic crops were in immediate need of protection.
- The inability of the discipline to possess objective meanings—however much its practitioners might genuinely try—may be the source of its institutional melancholy.
- By depicting workers in a style that celebrated their primordial nature, the artist may have genuinely been expressing his political sympathies.
2To the fullest degree; properly. people don't genuinely understand what they're dealing with Example sentencesExamples - Her choice of objects are illuminated by noticing the effects of similar strategies in the work of those artists who were genuinely her peers.
- They hope to create powerful studies that will genuinely influence equine clinical veterinary medicine within a relatively short time frame.
- They have produced one of the city's first large-scale office buildings that genuinely have the capacity to be passively ventilated.
- This is one of the bodies of work that most genuinely achieves a reconsideration and readaptation of Baroque sensibilities.
- The power of such sites to genuinely support public memory narratives, rather than simply freezing the past, is very much at issue everywhere.
- On projects like this, designers genuinely give clients a full service, for little or no profit.
- Any benefits must genuinely reach those that need them, rather than simply lining the pockets of the biotech and pharmaceutical industries.
- Its suggestion that the building might be ornamented with all the magnificence of a public fountain may genuinely have given the architect some cause for concern.
- They are yet to genuinely seize the issue wholeheartedly.
- Here is a book that genuinely advances our understanding of the writer, his work, and the England he resented and resisted.
- 2.1as submodifier Really (used for emphasis)
this is a genuinely funny film Example sentencesExamples - It is very atmospheric with some genuinely frightening moments in the middle of all the frivolity.
- They use visual and kinetic means to deliver a political, consciousness-raising message, but their works are also genuinely disruptive.
- In a world where nearly everything is for sale, genuinely meaningful experiences are rare commodities.
- There are moments when the character's post-marriage angst is genuinely heartbreaking.
- Individual efforts compound to a collective consciousness that can be genuinely influential.
- Let the molecular biologists turn their attention to genuinely advantageous uses of their knowledge in ways that do not invade the genome.
- The result was not cheap and corny, but complex and genuinely humanistic, invoking some of the central ambiguities of contemporary life.
- To be sure, he was responsible for some genuinely memorable architecture.
- This tale told by the poet in 1859 is at once deliciously caustic and genuinely wistful.
- The classroom is the last available site for the debate and germination of genuinely dangerous ideas.
Definition of genuinely in US English: genuinelyadverbˈjenyo͞oənlēˈdʒɛnjuənli 1In a truthful way. they speak genuinely about how proud they are Example sentencesExamples - We help those who genuinely cannot compete, and we provide opportunity for those who can.
- Greene is genuinely asking, in both book and film, "What are the foundations of moral behavior in a world where personal and social values have been so eroded?"
- This edition will instruct and inspire all who use it and help them learn what it means to be, and to remain, a genuinely confessing Lutheran.
- He genuinely thought, and I have absolutely no reason to disbelieve him, that that insurgent was already dead.
- I genuinely can't remember.
- Children genuinely form bonds with and nurture a deep affection for these toys, the way past generations did for teddy bears.
- Despite being a genuinely ill hypochondriac, he wrote about aristocrats, chamber music, church steeples, Parisian high life, snobbery, and interior design.
- They are gasping for politicians to genuinely communicate with them.
- I am a consumer like everyone else, but there has to be a point when consumption ends and one has to genuinely invest oneself in life.
- Would it be much better if I prayed genuinely to worship God?
- 1.1 Used to emphasize sincerity or seriousness.
both parties genuinely believe they're right it is genuinely an honor to be on the campaign Example sentencesExamples - The likelihood that the works will be received as "self-portraits"—as the artist genuinely intends them—is highly questionable.
- All 28 argue that they had a lawful excuse to destroy the crop because they genuinely believed that neighboring organic crops were in immediate need of protection.
- There she worked in the studio incessantly, so much that her teacher, Alexander Yacovlev, genuinely believed she had time for little else in her life, let alone a boyfriend.
- We genuinely felt that we could not not have a particular piece, even if it made for a cleaner, more pristine kind of show.
- He was portrayed as a man who genuinely believed in the moral benefits of separating half-caste children from their parents.
- The inability of the discipline to possess objective meanings—however much its practitioners might genuinely try—may be the source of its institutional melancholy.
- As a character, the sheriff elevates that film because he genuinely believes in hard-line justice.
- Eschewing passive voyeurism or manipulative choreography, the photographer genuinely wanted to understand and befriend these artists.
- With a complex about being a "little New York," Torontonians seem to genuinely think that theirs is the best—and sometimes the only—city on the planet.
- By depicting workers in a style that celebrated their primordial nature, the artist may have genuinely been expressing his political sympathies.
2To the fullest degree; properly. people don't genuinely understand what they're dealing with Example sentencesExamples - They hope to create powerful studies that will genuinely influence equine clinical veterinary medicine within a relatively short time frame.
- Her choice of objects are illuminated by noticing the effects of similar strategies in the work of those artists who were genuinely her peers.
- Here is a book that genuinely advances our understanding of the writer, his work, and the England he resented and resisted.
- On projects like this, designers genuinely give clients a full service, for little or no profit.
- The power of such sites to genuinely support public memory narratives, rather than simply freezing the past, is very much at issue everywhere.
- Its suggestion that the building might be ornamented with all the magnificence of a public fountain may genuinely have given the architect some cause for concern.
- They have produced one of the city's first large-scale office buildings that genuinely have the capacity to be passively ventilated.
- This is one of the bodies of work that most genuinely achieves a reconsideration and readaptation of Baroque sensibilities.
- They are yet to genuinely seize the issue wholeheartedly.
- Any benefits must genuinely reach those that need them, rather than simply lining the pockets of the biotech and pharmaceutical industries.
- 2.1as submodifier Really (used for emphasis)
this is a genuinely funny film Example sentencesExamples - To be sure, he was responsible for some genuinely memorable architecture.
- It is very atmospheric with some genuinely frightening moments in the middle of all the frivolity.
- The result was not cheap and corny, but complex and genuinely humanistic, invoking some of the central ambiguities of contemporary life.
- The classroom is the last available site for the debate and germination of genuinely dangerous ideas.
- This tale told by the poet in 1859 is at once deliciously caustic and genuinely wistful.
- They use visual and kinetic means to deliver a political, consciousness-raising message, but their works are also genuinely disruptive.
- Individual efforts compound to a collective consciousness that can be genuinely influential.
- In a world where nearly everything is for sale, genuinely meaningful experiences are rare commodities.
- There are moments when the character's post-marriage angst is genuinely heartbreaking.
- Let the molecular biologists turn their attention to genuinely advantageous uses of their knowledge in ways that do not invade the genome.
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