Adverb
true to form (not comparable)
(idiomatic) According to one's nature; as expected.
After operating as such a polarizing player for so much of his career because of his ball dominance and improbable shots, he stayed true to form in the end — and was celebrated for it. Source: Internet
Always true to form, he was up and about almost immediately and eschewed even over-the-counter pain medication. Source: Internet
At the Cleveland dinner, which was held at the Renaissance Cleveland Hotel, Hattoy, true to form, jokingly chided the group for putting up someone with AIDS in the Terminal Tower. Source: Internet
Based on the movie, “Legally Blonde: The Musical” stays true to form with a peppy score and playful look. Source: Internet
In this age of cloud computing, HPC shops have been true to form, seizing upon cheap and plentiful public cloud resources to build ginormous compute clusters for short dollars -- and big results. Source: Internet
She would only be true to form if she opts anew to lure the congressmen with hefty shares of government funds in an attempt to get another favorable vote on the impeachment complaint. Source: Internet