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in truth

ADVERB
  1. in fact (used as intensifiers or sentence modifiers)
    in truth, moral decay hastened the decline of the Roman Empire
    a truly awful book
    really, you shouldn't have done it

How To Use in truth In A Sentence

  • The dress wasn't low cut, but in truth she didn't have a lot of cleavage to reveal, her figure being quite elfin.
  • In truth, she could not have known she had fallen into this realm as the mere awareness of self and location whether spatial or otherwise would negate the very nature of the state itself.
  • In truth, though, Oxford did not produce the hockey they are no doubt capable of in the second period.
  • In truth it was all he could do to contain himself, and he felt that his only chance of bearing up was to say nothing more than was absolutely necessary in short ejaculatory phrases. Dusty Diamonds Cut and Polished A Tale of City Arab Life and Adventure
  • In truth, they worked superbly as a team - they were the duumvirate who, in the first, formative years of independence, effectively united and strengthened India.
  • In truth, taking on Sandamhor as a family enterprise would be an impossibility without my mother's salary as a headteacher on a neighbouring island. Back to the land: from London to sheep farming on Eigg
  • In truth, he seems to be more motivated and inspired by bitterness and spite than ever.
  • In truth, more money in the teachers' pay packets is only papering over the cracks, not attacking and solving the real problems.
  • In truth it is the genetic similarity between humans and primates that makes experimenting on them expedient.
  • In truth, she knew he probably did indeed possess that strength but it made her feel a little better by trying to bruise his male ego.
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