Real in a sentence as a noun

Otherwise you'll have to start looking around for a real job in a couple of weeks.

But the mental health of founders is a real issue and rarely discussed.

"Built a company with real revenues from nothing.

And you know as well as I do how surprising that is, because they don't "get" much of anything, really.

You could go to meetup groups, or meet people online and transition to real-world encounters.

[0] Because it's pug ugly, not because of the solar death ray thing, that's quite amusing really.

I mean, yeah, they micro-manage really well, but I wouldn't list it as a strength or anything.

We know using weapons to attack people creates horrific, real human harm.

But the Apple inventors' filing date is January 2007; swearing behind that far would be a real challenge.

By the time we reached Calculus I was still doing most of it in my head, as I had never really learned to write it out on paper.

Real in a sentence as an adjective

I mentioned before, but if you want guaranteed replication, use w=2 form of getLastError.> But, the real problem:> 1.

It's not even super clear whose mom he was talking about, and doesn't really matter, because nobody's mom can use the goddamn website.

This means malaria must be really good at two things: keeping its host walking around and going undetected for as long as possible.

All that leads to is cold, harsh discourse and criticism without considering the more abstract, but very real ways humans feel and behave.

It doesn't matter that the app you lost was the testing instance of a status dashboard with no real data in it, because the exploit coughs up shell access on that server.

"The view is so pixelated it makes decisions tough" Can you imagine military people who fight/fought on the ground in real combat and order in strikes reading that?

The founders of Diaspora were in a really unenviable position.

However much you might want to hear Alexander account for the activities of the NSA, the NSA itself is not the real oversight mechanism for the NSA!

If we really cared about benchmark performance over anything else we would have dealt with the locking issues earlier so multi-threaded benchmarks would be better.

The sheer amount of fakeness delivered through ads and ******** mass media has made us very interested in "real" things, in hanging out with our friends, in starting families.

Real in a sentence as an adverb

I'd rather chew razor blades than talk about traffic, weather, casino gambling, baseball, real estate taxes, gun control, politics, or Dancing with the Stars.

I believe Mr. Greenspan is both sincere and passionate about what he believes but what he asserts is really a case to be made to the legislative policy-makers, not to the courts.

Nobody can make any real forward progress until very serious quotas and throttling are put in place in every single service.- monitoring and QA are the same thing.

And their operations are a mess; they don't really have SREs and they make engineers pretty much do everything, which leaves almost no time for coding - though again this varies by group, so it's luck of the draw.

Would you?Well, the first big thing Bezos realized is that the infrastructure they'd built for selling and shipping books and sundry could be transformed an excellent repurposable computing platform.

A teeny tiny sampling of these discoveries included:- pager escalation gets way harder, because a ticket might bounce through 20 service calls before the real owner is identified.

I hate... plussing, or whatever it's called when you do a massive rant in Google+ even though it's a terrible venue for it but you do it anyway because in the end you really do want Google to be successful.

You 150-odd ex-Amazon folks here will of course realize immediately that #7 was a little joke I threw in, because Bezos most definitely does not give a **** about your day.#6, however, was quite real, so people went to work.

In every one of those ******** articles, someone had to marshall real arguments, chase down real sources, and in many cases defend those arguments against both bona fide Wikipedia contributors and also sockpuppets of the subjects of the article.

During that entire time, her article stood with a very prominent notice saying it was going to be deleted, with a prominent link allowing people to argue in favor of keeping or, better yet, locate a real reliable source backing up any claim to her notability.

Real definitions

noun

any rational or irrational number

noun

the basic unit of money in Brazil; equal to 100 centavos

noun

an old small silver Spanish coin

adjective

being or occurring in fact or actuality; having verified existence; not illusory; "real objects"; "real people; not ghosts"; "a film based on real life"; "a real illness"; "real humility"; "Life is real! Life is earnest!"- Longfellow

See also: existent

adjective

no less than what is stated; worthy of the name; "the real reason"; "real war"; "a real friend"; "a real woman"; "meat and potatoes--I call that a real meal"; "it's time he had a real job"; "it's no penny-ante job--he's making real money"

adjective

not to be taken lightly; "statistics demonstrate that poverty and unemployment are very real problems"; "to the man sleeping regularly in doorways homelessness is real"

adjective

capable of being treated as fact; "tangible evidence"; "his brief time as Prime Minister brought few real benefits to the poor"

See also: tangible

adjective

being or reflecting the essential or genuine character of something; "her actual motive"; "a literal solitude like a desert"- G.K.Chesterton; "a genuine dilemma"

See also: actual genuine literal

adjective

of, relating to, or representing an amount that is corrected for inflation; "real prices"; "real income"; "real wages"

adjective

having substance or capable of being treated as fact; not imaginary; "the substantial world"; "a mere dream, neither substantial nor practical"; "most ponderous and substantial things"- Shakespeare

See also: substantial material

adjective

(of property) fixed or immovable; "real property consists of land and buildings"

adjective

coinciding with reality; "perceptual error...has a surprising resemblance to veridical perception"- F.A.Olafson

See also: veridical

adverb

used as intensifiers; `real' is sometimes used informally for `really'; `rattling' is informal; "she was very gifted"; "he played very well"; "a really enjoyable evening"; "I'm real sorry about it"; "a rattling good yarn"

See also: very really rattling