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1 belief
* * *be.lief[bil'i:f] n 1 convicção, opinião, ponto de vista. my belief is that... / creio que... 2 crença. 3 fé, confiança. worthy of belief / digno de fé. 4 fé religiosa, credo. easy of belief crédulo, ingênuo. past all belief inacreditável. The Belief o Credo Apostólico. -
2 belief
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3 belief
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4 belief
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5 The Belief
The Beliefo Credo Apostólico. -
6 easy of belief
easy of beliefcrédulo, ingênuo. -
7 past all belief
past all beliefinacreditável. -
8 justified true belief
English-Portuguese philosophical dictionary > justified true belief
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9 confidence
['konfidəns]1) (trust or belief in someone's ability: I have great confidence in you.) confiança2) (belief and faith in one's own ability: She shows a great deal of confidence for her age.) segurança* * *con.fi.dence[k'ɔnfidəns] n 1 confiança, fé, convicção, segurança, certeza, confiança em si próprio. he advanced with confidence / ele procedeu com confiança. he lacked confidence / faltou-lhe confiança em si mesmo. 2 segredo, confidência. he made confidences to me / ele me fez confidências. • adj relativo ao conto-do-vigário. in strict confidence estritamente confidencial. -
10 faith
[feiƟ]1) (trust or belief: She had faith in her ability.) fé2) (religious belief: Years of hardship had not caused him to lose his faith.) fé3) (loyalty to one's promise: to keep/break faith with someone.) promessa•- faithful- faithfully
- Yours faithfully
- faithfulness
- faithless
- faithlessness
- in all good faith
- in good faith* * *[feiθ] n fé: 1 fé, crença ou convicção religiosa. to have faith / ter fé. to break one’s faith / quebrar a fé. 2 crença, matéria de crença, boas intenções. in (all) good faith / de boa fé, com boas intenções. in bad faith / de má fé, com más intenções. in good faith / de boa fé. 3 the faith a fé de Cristo, a religião cristã. • interj de fato, na verdade! in faith / na verdade, por certo. breach of faith deslealdade. on the faith of confiando em. Punic faith fé púnica: má fé, deslealdade, palavra ou promessa traiçoeira. to keep faith with ser leal, fiel a. to keep one’s faith cumprir a palavra. to pin one’s faith to ou upon ter fé e confiança, não dar ouvidos a razão ou argumentos. to put faith in dar fé, acreditar, confiar. -
11 fallacy
['fæləsi]plural - fallacies; noun(a wrong idea or belief, usually one that is generally believed to be true; false reasoning: That belief is just a fallacy.) falácia* * *fal.la.cy[f'æləsi] n falácia: 1 engano, erro, idéia errônea. the fallacy of his arguments / a falácia de seus argumentos. 2 argumento ou raciocínio falso. -
12 religion
[rə'li‹ən]1) (a belief in, or the worship of, a god or gods.) religião2) (a particular system of belief or worship: Christianity and Islam are two different religions.) religião•- religiously
- religiousness* * *re.li.gion[ril'idʒən] n 1 religião. 2 ordem religiosa. 3 fé, crença. 4 pl serviços divinos. 5 fig senso de responsabilidade. to enter into religion entrar numa ordem religiosa. -
13 superstition
[su:pə'stiʃən]1) ((the state of fear and ignorance resulting from) the belief in magic, witchcraft and other things that cannot he explained by reason.) superstição2) (an example of this type of belief: There is an old superstition that those who marry in May will have bad luck.) superstição•- superstitiously* * *su.per.sti.tion[su:pəst'iʃən] n superstição, crendice. -
14 confidence
['konfidəns]1) (trust or belief in someone's ability: I have great confidence in you.) confiança2) (belief and faith in one's own ability: She shows a great deal of confidence for her age.) autoconfiança -
15 faith
[feiƟ]1) (trust or belief: She had faith in her ability.) confiança2) (religious belief: Years of hardship had not caused him to lose his faith.) fé3) (loyalty to one's promise: to keep/break faith with someone.) fidelidade•- faithful- faithfully - Yours faithfully - faithfulness - faithless - faithlessness - in all good faith - in good faith -
16 fallacy
['fæləsi]plural - fallacies; noun(a wrong idea or belief, usually one that is generally believed to be true; false reasoning: That belief is just a fallacy.) falácia, sofisma -
17 religion
[rə'li‹ən]1) (a belief in, or the worship of, a god or gods.) religião2) (a particular system of belief or worship: Christianity and Islam are two different religions.) religião•- religiously - religiousness -
18 superstition
[su:pə'stiʃən]1) ((the state of fear and ignorance resulting from) the belief in magic, witchcraft and other things that cannot he explained by reason.) superstição2) (an example of this type of belief: There is an old superstition that those who marry in May will have bad luck.) superstição•- superstitiously -
19 atheism
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20 believe
[bi'li:v]1) (to regard (something) as true: I believe his story.) acreditar2) (to trust (a person), accepting what he says as true: I believe you.) acreditar3) (to think (that): I believe he's ill.) achar•- belief
- believer
- believe in* * *be.lieve[bil'i:v] vt+vi 1 acreditar, crer. he believes me / ele acredita em mim. I cannot believe what you say / não posso acreditar nas suas palavras. 2 ter fé em, confiar. I believe in God / eu creio em Deus. 3 aceitar como certo ou verdadeiro. 4 ter fé religiosa, ser crente. 5 pensar, suportar, julgar. he is believed to be ill / acredita-se que ele esteja doente. I believe him to be clever / julgo-o inteligente. I believe I have met him / penso tê-lo encontrado. I believe so creio que sim. seeing is believing prov ver para crer.
См. также в других словарях:
Belief — is the psychological state in which an individual holds a proposition or premise to be true. [Citation last = Schwitzgebel first = Eric editor last = Zalta editor first = Edward contribution = Belief title = The Stanford Encyclopedia of… … Wikipedia
Belief — • That state of the mind by which it assents to propositions, not by reason of their intrinsic evidence, but because of authority Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Belief Belief … Catholic encyclopedia
belief — be·lief n: a degree of conviction of the truth of something esp. based on a consideration or examination of the evidence compare knowledge, suspicion Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996 … Law dictionary
belief — 1 Belief, faith, credence, credit are comparable when they mean the act of one who assents intellectually to something proposed or offered for acceptance as true or the state of mind of one who so assents. Belief is less restricted in its… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
Belief — Be*lief , n. [OE. bileafe, bileve; cf. AS. gele[ a]fa. See {Believe}.] 1. Assent to a proposition or affirmation, or the acceptance of a fact, opinion, or assertion as real or true, without immediate personal knowledge; reliance upon word or… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
belief — (n.) late 12c., bileave, replacing O.E. geleafa belief, faith, from W.Gmc. *ga laubon to hold dear, esteem, trust (Cf. O.S. gilobo, M.Du. gelove, O.H.G. giloubo, Ger. Glaube), from *galaub dear, esteemed, from intensive prefix *ga + *leubh … Etymology dictionary
belief — ► NOUN 1) a feeling that something exists or is true, especially one without proof. 2) a firmly held opinion. 3) (belief in) trust or confidence in. 4) religious faith. ● beyond belief Cf. ↑beyond belief … English terms dictionary
belief — [bə lēf′, bēlēf′] n. [ME bileve < bi , BE + leve, contr. < ileve < OE geleafa: see BELIEVE] 1. the state of believing; conviction or acceptance that certain things are true or real 2. faith, esp. religious faith 3. trust or confidence [I … English World dictionary
belief — [n1] putting regard in as true acceptance, admission, assent, assumption, assurance, avowal, axiom, certainty, conclusion, confidence, conjecture, conviction, credence, credit, deduction, divination, expectation, faith, fancy, feeling, guess,… … New thesaurus
BELIEF — The Bible In the Bible there are no articles of faith or dogmas in the Christian or Islamic sense of the terms. Although trust in God is regarded as a paramount religious virtue (Gen. 15:6; Isa. 7:9; cf. Job 2:9), there is nowhere in Scripture an … Encyclopedia of Judaism
belief — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ absolute, deep seated, deeply held, fervent, firm, passionate, profound, strong, strongly held, unshakable, unwavering … Collocations dictionary