[
UK
/dʒˈɛnjuːɪnli/
]
[ US /ˈdʒɛnˈjuˌwaɪnɫi, ˈdʒɛnjəwənɫi/ ]
[ US /ˈdʒɛnˈjuˌwaɪnɫi, ˈdʒɛnjəwənɫi/ ]
ADVERB
-
genuinely; with authority
it is authentically British -
in accordance with truth or fact or reality
a genuinely open society
they don't really listen to us
she was now truly American
How To Use genuinely In A Sentence
- Everyone became equally loud, crude and garrulous, the technically sober behaving identically to the genuinely drunk.
- I would also argue that the results Kumon reports achieving have little to do with their philosophy and practice about teaching and learning and much more to do with the fact that it gets parents and assistants as its teachers are called genuinely involved in children's learning. Ellen Galinsky: Fast-Tracking to Kindergarten? How About a Good Track to Learning in Kindergarten and Beyond?
- Ironic, because this is genuinely naked food, stripped bare, revealing all, hiding nothing.
- The size and familiarity of the little lamb is genuinely touching. Times, Sunday Times
- I phrased it as a sarcastic taunt, but I genuinely wanted to know the answer.
- Their songs have a certain elegant charm and a quality of innocence that's genuinely disarming.
- We would urge celebrities and icons not to support energy dense foods and to make sure it is a genuinely healthy product they promote.
- Each year a select few men and women are honored because of their genuinely heroic contributions to the enhancement of cooperative enterprise and to the advancement of the principles of cooperation.
- At the beginning of the film, her Toula is genuinely uncomely.
- I don't want to sound like a begging, grovelling idiot, but I am genuinely in pain knowing that I cant go.