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| a screen or mat covered with a dark material for shielding a camera lens from excess light or glare. |
| a gadget; dingus; thingumbob. |
| true (truː) | |
| —adj , truer, truest | |
| 1. | not false, fictional, or illusory; factual or factually accurate; conforming with reality |
| 2. | (prenominal) being of real or natural origin; genuine; not synthetic: true leather |
| 3. | a. unswervingly faithful and loyal to friends, a cause, etc: a true follower |
| b. (as collective noun; preceded by the): the loyal and the true | |
| 4. | faithful to a particular concept of truth, esp of religious truth: a true believer |
| 5. | conforming to a required standard, law, or pattern: a true aim; a true fit |
| 6. | exactly in tune: a true note |
| 7. | (of a compass bearing) according to the earth's geographical rather than magnetic poles: true north |
| 8. | biology conforming to the typical structure of a designated type: sphagnum moss is a true moss, Spanish moss is not |
| 9. | physics Compare apparent not apparent or relative; taking into account all complicating factors: the true expansion of a liquid takes into account the expansion of the container |
| 10. | informal not true unbelievable; remarkable: she's got so much money it's not true |
| 11. | true to life exactly comparable with reality |
| —n | |
| 12. | correct alignment (esp in the phrases in true, out of true) |
| —adv | |
| 13. | truthfully; rightly |
| 14. | precisely or unswervingly: he shot true |
| 15. | biology without variation from the ancestral type: to breed true |
| —vb , truer, truest, trues, truing, trued | |
| 16. | (tr) to adjust so as to make true |
| [Old English triewe; related to Old Frisian triūwe, Old Saxon, Old High German triuwi loyal, Old Norse tryggr; see | |
| 'trueness | |
| —n | |