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genuine
[jen-yoo-in]
adjective
possessing the claimed or attributed character, quality, or origin; not counterfeit; authentic; real.
genuine sympathy;
a genuine antique.
properly so called.
a genuine case of smallpox.
free from pretense, affectation, or hypocrisy; sincere.
a genuine person.
descended from the original stock; pure in breed.
a genuine Celtic people.
genuine
/ ˈdʒɛnjʊɪn /
adjective
not fake or counterfeit; original; real; authentic
not pretending; frank; sincere
being of authentic or original stock
Pronunciation Note
Other Word Forms
- genuinely adverb
- genuineness noun
- nongenuine adjective
- quasi-genuine adjective
- ungenuine adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of genuine1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
But analysis by the Resolution Foundation think tank shows there has also been a genuine rise in the number of people out of work due to ill health.
Public-sector language is purged of all references to genuine history and science, in a campaign George Orwell would have found crude and obvious.
Praising the quick-thinking of those at the synagogue, he told the BBC: "I saw genuine heroism, I have to say, and people who ran to help others rather than running away. It was astonishing."
“You have to have something savory with something sweet to really enjoy it. I don’t want it to feel generic. It’s a more genuine expression if it has duality.”
Praising the quick-thinking of those at the synagogue, he said: "I saw genuine heroism, I have to say, and people who ran to help others rather than running away. It was astonishing."
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