- 真人真事 zhēnrénzhēnshì true storyActual people and real events; a story based on fact
- 真人不露相 zhēnrénbùlòuxiàng to hide one's light under a bushel(idiom) a person of great ability or status does not flaunt their true worth; a master of their craft usually appears as an ordinary person
- 吴真人 wúzhēnrén Wu Zhenrendeified physician and god of medicine in Chinese folk religion, also known as the Great Emperor Who Preserves Life
- 真人实境秀 zhēnrénshíjìngxiù reality showtelevision program featuring real people in unscripted situations
- 真人版 zhēnrénbǎn live-action versionA live-action version or real-life adaptation of a character or story that was originally in an imaginary format such as a cartoon, comic, or game.
- 真人秀 zhēnrénxiù reality showTV show featuring ordinary people rather than actors, typically following their real lives or putting them in unscripted situations
- 虚寂冲应真人 xūjìchōngyīngzhēnrén Perfected Person of Vacant Silence and Humble ResponseDaoist honorary title for Magu, a legendary immortal associated with longevity and the reclamation of land from the sea
- 冲虚真人 chōngxūzhēnrén Chongxu ZhenrenHonorific title for the philosopher [[列御寇|列禦寇|lie4 yu4 kou4]], commonly known as [[列子|列子|lie4 zi3]]; he was a Daoist thinker from the state of Zheng during the Warring States period, famously granted this title by Emperor Xuanzong of Tang.
- 长春真人西游记 chángchūnzhēnrénxīyóujì Travels of the Alchemist Changchunhistorical travelogue written by Li Zhichang, documenting the journey of the Daoist monk Qiu Chuji from northern China to Central Asia to meet Genghis Khan
- 大道真人 dàdàozhēnrén Dadao Zhenrentitle given to the Great Emperor Who Preserves Life, a popular patron deity of medicine in Southern Min and Taiwanese culture
- 正一真人 zhèngyīzhēnrén Zhengyi Zhenrentitle given to Zhang Daoling, the founder of the Celestial Masters sect of Taoism during the Eastern Han dynasty
- 真人先师 zhēnrénxiānshī Perfected Person and Ancestral Masteran honorific title for the Great Emperor Who Preserves Life, a deity in Chinese folk religion and Taoism especially worshipped in Fujian and Taiwan