The difference between Heartfelt and True

When used as adjectives, heartfelt means felt or believed deeply and sincerely, whereas true means conforming to the actual state of reality or fact.


True is also noun with the meaning: the state of being in alignment.

True is also adverb with the meaning: accurately.

True is also verb with the meaning: to straighten.

check bellow for the other definitions of Heartfelt and True

  1. Heartfelt as an adjective:

    Felt or believed deeply and sincerely.

    Examples:

    "She expressed her heartfelt sympathies at the death of his mother."

  1. True as an adjective (of a statement):

    Conforming to the actual state of reality or fact; factually correct.

    Examples:

    "This is a true story."

  2. True as an adjective:

    Conforming to a rule or pattern; exact; accurate.

    Examples:

    "a true copy; a true likeness of the original"

  3. True as an adjective (logic):

    Of the state in Boolean logic that indicates an affirmative or positive result.

    Examples:

    "A and B" is true if and only if "A" is true and "B" is true."

  4. True as an adjective:

    Loyal, faithful.

    Examples:

    "He’s turned out to be a true friend."

  5. True as an adjective:

    Genuine.

    Examples:

    "This is true Parmesan cheese."

  6. True as an adjective:

    Legitimate.

    Examples:

    "The true king has returned!"

  7. True as an adjective (of an, [[aim]] or [[missile]] in [[archery]], [[shooting]], [[golf]]{{,):

    etc.}} Accurate; following a path toward the target.

  8. True as an adjective (chiefly, probability):

    Fair, unbiased, not loaded.

  1. True as an adverb (of shooting, throwing etc):

    Accurately.

    Examples:

    "this gun shoots true'"

  1. True as a noun (uncountable):

    The state of being in alignment.

  2. True as a noun (uncountable, obsolete):

    Truth.

  3. True as a noun (countable, obsolete):

    A pledge or truce.

  1. True as a verb:

    To straighten.

    Examples:

    "He trued the spokes of the bicycle wheel."

  2. True as a verb:

    To make even, level, symmetrical, or accurate, align; adjust.

    Examples:

    "We spent all night truing up the report."

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