释义 |
authentic
au·then·tic A0531600 (ô-thĕn′tĭk)adj.1. Conforming to fact and therefore worthy of trust, reliance, or belief: an authentic account by an eyewitness.2. Being so in fact; not fraudulent or counterfeit: an authentic medieval sword.3. Law Executed in a manner so as to produce legal effectiveness: an authentic deed.4. Music a. Of, relating to, or being a medieval mode having a range from its final tone to the octave above it.b. Of, relating to, or being a cadence with the dominant chord immediately preceding the tonic chord.5. Obsolete Authoritative. [Middle English autentik, from Old French autentique, from Late Latin authenticus, from Greek authentikos, from authentēs, author, master : autos, self + -hentēs, accomplisher, achiever; akin to Attic Greek hanutein, to accomplish, variant of Greek anuein.] au·then′ti·cal·ly adv.Synonyms: authentic, bona fide, genuine, real1, true, unquestionable These adjectives mean not counterfeit or copied: an authentic painting by Monet; a bona fide transfer of property; genuine crabmeat; a real diamond; true courage; an unquestionable antique.authentic (ɔːˈθɛntɪk) or authenticaladj1. of undisputed origin or authorship; genuine: an authentic signature. 2. accurate in representation of the facts; trustworthy; reliable: an authentic account. 3. (Law) (of a deed or other document) duly executed, any necessary legal formalities having been complied with4. (Classical Music) music a. using period instruments and historically researched scores and playing techniques in an attempt to perform a piece as it would have been played at the time it was writtenb. (in combination): an authentic-instrument performance. 5. (Music, other) music a. (of a mode as used in Gregorian chant) commencing on the final and ending an octave higherb. (of a cadence) progressing from a dominant to a tonic chord Compare plagal[C14: from Late Latin authenticus coming from the author, from Greek authentikos, from authentēs one who acts independently, from auto- + hentēs a doer] auˈthentically adv authenticity nau•then•tic (ɔˈθɛn tɪk) adj. 1. genuine; real. 2. having an origin supported by unquestionable evidence: an authentic work by an old master. 3. entitled to acceptance or belief because of agreement with known facts or experience; reliable; trustworthy: an authentic report. 4. Music. a. (of a church mode) having a range extending from the final to the octave above. Compare plagal (def. 1). b. (of a cadence) progressing from the dominant to the tonic chord. Compare plagal (def. 2). 5. Obs. authoritative. [1300–50; Middle English autentik (< Anglo-French) < Late Latin authenticus < Greek authentikós <authént(ēs) perpetrator, doer] au•then′ti•cal•ly, adv. au•then•tic•i•ty (ˌɔ θɛnˈtɪs ɪ ti, ˌɔ θən-) n. ThesaurusAdj. | 1. | authentic - conforming to fact and therefore worthy of belief; "an authentic account by an eyewitness"; "reliable information"reliabletrustworthy, trusty - worthy of trust or belief; "a trustworthy report"; "an experienced and trustworthy traveling companion" | | 2. | authentic - not counterfeit or copied; "an authentic signature"; "a bona fide manuscript"; "an unquestionable antique"; "photographs taken in a veritable bull ring"bona fide, unquestionable, veritableecht, genuine - not fake or counterfeit; "a genuine Picasso"; "genuine leather" |
authenticadjective1. real, true, original, actual, pure, genuine, valid, faithful, undisputed, veritable, lawful, on the level (informal), bona fide, dinkum (Austral & N.Z. informal), pukka, the real McCoy, true-to-life patterns for making authentic border-style clothing real supposed, false, fake, mock, synthetic, imitation, untrue, pseudo (informal), unreal, counterfeit2. accurate, true, certain, reliable, legitimate, authoritative, factual, truthful, dependable, trustworthy, veracious authentic details about the birth of the organization accurate misleading, fraudulent, hypothetical, unfaithful, spurious, fictitiousauthenticadjective1. Worthy of belief, as because of precision or faithfulness to an original:authoritative, convincing, credible, faithful, true, trustworthy, valid.2. Not counterfeit or copied:actual, bona fide, genuine, good, indubitable, original, real, true, undoubted, unquestionable.Translationsauthentic (oːˈθentik) adjective true, real or genuine. an authentic signature. 真的 真的ˌauthenˈticity (-sə-) noun 真實性 真实性authentic
authentic1. (of a deed or other document) duly executed, any necessary legal formalities having been complied with 2. Musica. using period instruments and historically researched scores and playing techniques in an attempt to perform a piece as it would have been played at the time it was written b. (in combination) 3. Musica. (of a mode as used in Gregorian chant) commencing on the final and ending an octave higher b. (of a cadence) progressing from a dominant to a tonic chord authentic
authentic (of a deed or other document) duly executed, any necessary legal formalities having been complied with.AUTHENTIC. This term signifies an original of which there is no doubt. authentic
Synonyms for authenticadj realSynonyms- real
- true
- original
- actual
- pure
- genuine
- valid
- faithful
- undisputed
- veritable
- lawful
- on the level
- bona fide
- dinkum
- pukka
- the real McCoy
- true-to-life
Antonyms- supposed
- false
- fake
- mock
- synthetic
- imitation
- untrue
- pseudo
- unreal
- counterfeit
adj accurateSynonyms- accurate
- true
- certain
- reliable
- legitimate
- authoritative
- factual
- truthful
- dependable
- trustworthy
- veracious
Antonyms- misleading
- fraudulent
- hypothetical
- unfaithful
- spurious
- fictitious
Synonyms for authenticadj worthy of belief, as because of precision or faithfulness to an originalSynonyms- authoritative
- convincing
- credible
- faithful
- true
- trustworthy
- valid
adj not counterfeit or copiedSynonyms- actual
- bona fide
- genuine
- good
- indubitable
- original
- real
- true
- undoubted
- unquestionable
Synonyms for authenticadj conforming to fact and therefore worthy of beliefSynonymsRelated Wordsadj not counterfeit or copiedSynonyms- bona fide
- unquestionable
- veritable
Related Words |