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Discover LudwigThe phrase "actually believes" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to emphasize someone's genuine belief or conviction about something, often in contrast to doubt or skepticism.
Example: "Despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary, she actually believes that the conspiracy theory is true."
Alternatives: "truly believes" or "genuinely thinks".
Exact(60)
Unless, of course, it actually believes it.
Of course, no one actually believes that.
And Ryan actually believes this stuff.
"I'm very unclear as to what he actually believes.
He actually believes in left-wing economic ideas.
There is no way to know what he actually believes.
Yet nobody actually believes that this will happen.
He actually believes in what he says," Hersh says.
He actually believes it is an original piece of art.
She actually believes that Brexit did not just mean Brexit.
But do you think LaPierre actually believes this could happen?
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