confide / kənˈfaɪd /

⚽高中词汇倾诉吐露心声倾吐坦诚

confide2 个定义

v. 无主动词 verb

con·fid·ed, con·fid·ing.

  1. to impart secrets trustfully; discuss private matters or problems: She confides in no one but her husband.
  2. to have full trust; have faith: They confided in their own ability.
v. 有主动词 verb

con·fid·ed, con·fid·ing.

  1. to tell in assurance of secrecy: He confided all his plans to her.
  2. to entrust; commit to the charge or knowledge of another: She confided her jewelry to her sister.

confide 近义词

v. 动词 verb

divulge information

v. 动词 verb

entrust

更多confide例句

  1. You’ll rack up genuine dignity points if you choose to confide in one or two of your close friends that you may have overestimated your strength and suddenly find yourself feeling all crumbly and in need of someone to lean on.
  2. We’re nowhere near there yet, a managing director has confided off-the-record.
  3. As we scouted, he finally let his guard down, confiding in me about his difficult past.
  4. Cates confides that Atkinson actually let her try the simulator early on—and he later used the demo to evaluate potential board members.
  5. The Guardian said it was able to corroborate her account with several people in whom she had confided about the alleged incident.
  6. Bureaucrats confide that the reason ticket counters at train stations are so chaotic is to encourage bribes.
  7. And so some savvy digital media folks have come up with an older, more professional, more discreet version of Snapchat: Confide.
  8. If Anthony Weiner had used Confide instead of Twitter to send photos of his package, he might still have a political career.
  9. “The fact is you are my very best friend, I tell you everything, I confide in you, I seek your advice,” she wrote.
  10. His only company to confide in was the vermin in the street.
  11. Since she had entered the room she had also come to the conclusion that it was her duty to confide her misgivings to her mother.
  12. He is a trusty man to whom I can safely confide the charge of everything in my absence.
  13. As I have great sorrows, I will confide in you; dreadful disappointment, for which I will crave a smile.
  14. Bussy had been debating within himself whether or not to confide to his friends what he knew about Diana.
  15. It was, perhaps, the sympathy in her tone that urged the instructor to confide her trouble to a strange girl—a freshman, at that!