Define "Real".
re·al1
/ˈrē(ə)l/
adjective
adjective: real; comparative adjective: realer; superlative adjective: realest
1.
actually existing as a thing or occurring in fact; not imagined or supposed.
"Julius Caesar was a real person"
synonyms: actual, nonfictional, factual, real-life; More
historical;
material, physical, tangible, concrete, palpable
"is she a fictional character or a real person?"
antonyms: imaginary
used to emphasize the significance or seriousness of a situation or circumstance.
"there is a real danger of civil war"
Philosophy
relating to something as it is, not merely as it may be described or distinguished.
2.
(of a substance or thing) not imitation or artificial; genuine.
"the earring was presumably real gold"
synonyms: genuine, authentic, bona fide; More
informalkosher, honest-to-goodness, honest-to-God
"real gold"
sincere, genuine, true, unfeigned, heartfelt, unaffected
"tears of real grief"
antonyms: imaginary, fake, false, feigned
true or actual.
"his real name is Jess"
synonyms: true, actual
"my real name"
(of a person or thing) rightly so called; proper.
"he's my idea of a real man"
synonyms: proper, true;
informal regular
"a real man"
3.
informal
complete; utter (used for emphasis).
"the tour turned out to be a real disaster"
synonyms: complete, utter, thorough, absolute, total, prize, perfect
"you're a real idiot"
4.
adjusted for changes in the value of money; assessed by purchasing power.
"real incomes had fallen by 30 percent"
5.
Law
of fixed property (i.e., land and buildings), as distinct from personal property.
"he lost nearly all of his real holdings"
6.
Mathematics
(of a number or quantity) having no imaginary part.
7.
Optics
(of an image) of a kind in which the light that forms it actually passes through it; not virtual.
adverb
North American informal
adverb: real
1.
really; very.
"my head hurts real bad"