Перевод: с английского на греческий

с греческого на английский

to have confidence in

  • 1 Confidence

    subs.
    Trust: P. and V. πίστις, ἡ.
    Boldness: P. and V. θάρσος, τό, θρσος, τό; see Boldness.
    Assurance: P. and V. πίστις, ἡ.
    Have confidence in: P. and V. πίστιν ἔχειν (dat.); see Confide.
    Inform in strict confidence: P. ἐν ἀπορρήτῳ λέγειν (dat.) (Plat. Theaet. 152C).
    Regain confidence, v.; Ar. and P. ναθαρσεῖν.

    Woodhouse English-Greek dictionary. A vocabulary of the Attic language > Confidence

  • 2 confidence

    ['konfidəns]
    1) (trust or belief in someone's ability: I have great confidence in you.) εμπιστοσύνη
    2) (belief and faith in one's own ability: She shows a great deal of confidence for her age.) αυτοπεποίθηση

    English-Greek dictionary > confidence

  • 3 trust

    1. verb
    1) (to have confidence or faith; to believe: She trusted (in) him.) εμπιστεύομαι
    2) (to give (something to someone), believing that it will be used well and responsibly: I can't trust him with my car; I can't trust my car to him.) εμπιστεύομαι
    3) (to hope or be confident (that): I trust (that) you had / will have a good journey.) ελπίζω, πιστεύω
    2. noun
    1) (belief or confidence in the power, reality, truth, goodness etc of a person or thing: The firm has a great deal of trust in your ability; trust in God.) εμπιστοσύνη, πίστη
    2) (charge or care; responsibility: The child was placed in my trust.) ευθύνη
    3) (a task etc given to a person by someone who believes that they will do it, look after it etc well: He holds a position of trust in the firm.) ευθύνη
    4) (arrangement(s) by which something (eg money) is given to a person to use in a particular way, or to keep until a particular time: The money was to be held in trust for his children; ( also adjective) a trust fund) καταπίστευμα
    5) (a group of business firms working together: The companies formed a trust.) τραστ
    - trustworthy
    - trustworthiness
    - trusty
    - trustily
    - trustiness

    English-Greek dictionary > trust

  • 4 mistrust

    1. verb
    (to have no confidence or trust in.) δεν εμπιστεύομαι
    2. noun
    (lack of confidence in something.) καχυποψία,έλλειψη εμπιστοσύνης
    - mistrustfully

    English-Greek dictionary > mistrust

См. также в других словарях:

  • have confidence in — index confide (trust), rely Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • Confidence-based learning — or CBL is a methodology used in learning and training that measures a learner s knowledge quality by determining both the correctness of the learner s knowledge and confidence in that knowledge. Additionally, the CBL process is designed to… …   Wikipedia

  • confidence — con‧fi‧dence [ˈkɒnfdns ǁ ˈkɑːn ] noun [uncountable] 1. the feeling that you can trust someone or something to do what they say, work properly etc: • We have every confidence in the team. • Our top priority is to maintain customer confidence in… …   Financial and business terms

  • Confidence interval — This article is about the confidence interval. For Confidence distribution, see Confidence Distribution. In statistics, a confidence interval (CI) is a particular kind of interval estimate of a population parameter and is used to indicate the… …   Wikipedia

  • confidence — con|fi|dence W2S2 [ˈkɔnfıdəns US ˈka:n ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(feeling somebody/something is good)¦ 2¦(belief in yourself)¦ 3¦(feeling something is true)¦ 4 gain/win/earn somebody s confidence 5¦(keep information secret)¦ 6 take somebody into your… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • confidence — con|fi|dence [ kanfıdəns ] noun *** 1. ) uncount the belief that you are able to do things well: give someone confidence: Motherhood gave her confidence. gain/lose confidence: The more he fails, the more he loses confidence in his abilities. lack …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • confidence */*/*/ — UK [ˈkɒnfɪd(ə)ns] / US [ˈkɑnfɪdəns] noun Word forms confidence : singular confidence plural confidences 1) [uncountable] the belief that you are able to do things well have confidence: He s a nice boy, but he doesn t have much confidence.… …   English dictionary

  • confidence — noun 1 FEELING SB/STH IS GOOD (U) the feeling that you can trust someone or something to be good, work well, or produce good results (+ in): Our first priority is to maintain the customer s confidence in our product. | have confidence in: We have …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • Confidence — This article is about virtue. For other uses, see Confidence (disambiguation). Confident redirects here. For the theatrical character, see confidant. Confidence is generally described as a state of being certain either that a hypothesis or… …   Wikipedia

  • confidence — [[t]kɒ̱nfɪdəns[/t]] ♦♦ confidences 1) N UNCOUNT: usu N in n If you have confidence in someone, you feel that you can trust them. I have every confidence in you... This has contributed to the lack of confidence in the police... His record on… …   English dictionary

  • confidence — I. noun Date: 14th century 1. a. a feeling or consciousness of one s powers or of reliance on one s circumstances < had perfect confidence in her ability to succeed > < met the risk with brash confidence > b. faith or belief that one will act in… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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