A free service provided by Writers Nexus International

Writing Resources:
  • New Novelist Software
  • Writer Circles
  • Author Me
  • FirstWriter.com
  • Novel Advice
  • Robin's Nest for Writers
  • The Scriptorium
  • Women on Writing


A Writer's Dictionary:

out of true Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with O » out of one's depth ... outjockeying » out of true


true
adj
    1. Agreeing with fact or reality; not false or wrong.
      Thesaurus: valid, right, correct.
    2. Real; genuine; properly so called.
      Example: The spider is not a true insect
      Thesaurus: real, bona fide, genuine, authentic; Antonym: fake, false.
    3. Accurate or exact.
      Example: The photograph doesn't give a true idea of the size of the building
      Thesaurus: accurate, precise, exact; Antonym: inaccurate.
    4. Faithful; loyal.
      Example: a true friend
      Example: be true to one's word
      Thesaurus: loyal, stalwart, faithful, trustworthy, reliable, sure, constant, steady, devoted, dependable, sincere; Antonym: faithless.
    5. Conforming to a standard, pattern, type or expectation.
      Example: behaved true to type
    6. In the correct position; well-fitting; accurately adjusted.
    7. Said of a compass bearing: measured according to the Earth's axis and not magnetic north.
    8. Honest; sincere.
      Example: twelve good men and true
adverb
    1. Certainly.
      Example: True, she isn't very happy here
    2. Truthfully.
    3. Faithfully.
    4. Honestly.
    5. Accurately or precisely.
    6. Accurately in tune.
      Example: sing true
    7. Conforming to ancestral type.
      Example: breed true
verb
    trued, truing
    1. To bring or restore (eg machinery) into an accurate or required position.
Derivative: truly
    See separate entry.
Idiom: come true
    Said of a dream, hope, wish, etc: to happen in reality; to be fulfilled.
Idiom: out of true
    Not in the correct position; not straight or properly balanced.
Idiom: true to form
    Said of someone, their behaviour, etc: conforming to what is normal for them or expected of them.
Etymology: Anglo-Saxon treow.



Click Here