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The phrase "genuinely kind" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone who is genuinely kind, meaning their kindness is sincere and without any ulterior motives. For example, "My friend always goes out of his way to help me, he's genuinely kind."
Exact(29)
He's charming, fun and seems genuinely kind.
None of these people are anything but genuinely kind.
My friend, so smart, so funny, so genuinely kind, loved European novels with complex heroines.
He is, if there ever was one, a genuinely kind, good man".
"But the rejections were genuinely kind and encouraging, and it wasn't long before one said yes".
But the staff were genuinely kind and talkative to her, and reacted to her increasing paranoia with reassurance.
Similar(30)
She struck me both in her biography and in our conversations as a genuinely kind-hearted person who truly tried to help her fellow transwomen along the way, only to find herself ejected from that community.
She was genuinely so kind to every person she worked with.
What is required, he says, is "a genuinely new kind of scientist" who is trained in both computer science and biology.
Urgent, quietly assertive, at times doing his job simply by standing still in the right areas, Dier is a genuinely unusual kind of English footballer.
Present knowledge of the mechanisms of inheritance are such that modern scientists can distinguish more satisfactorily than Darwin between non-inheritable bodily variation and variation of a genuinely inheritable kind.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com