Confiado in english

Trusted

pronunciation: trʌstɪd part of speech: adjective
In gestures

confiado = unwary ; unsuspecting ; sanguine ; trustful ; trusting ; confident (in). 

Example: Experience has shown that the vastness of this as yet unordered field holds many pitfalls for the unwary librarian and researcher.Example: There has been little planning about what to do about the huge quantities of unevaluated and perhaps unwanted information which threatens to engulf the unsuspecting user.Example: A historical outline of the study of personality is given with particular emphasis on the concept of the 4 humours: choleric, melancholic, phlegmatic and sanguine.Example: They should be more trustful of their colleagues and to use information technology to a larger extent.Example: Yet without this trusting support for the editorial expertise of the publishers such books could not be published at all.Example: Experience of IT in USA is associated not infrequently with the confounding of confident expectations.

more:

» confiados, losunsuspecting, the .

Example: While some sites are strictly parody intended or product-promoting, some intentionally lure the unsuspecting into information provided by hate groups or other agenda-laden organisations.

» demasiado confiado en uno mismooverconfident  .

Example: When subjects are overconfident they stop looking for information long before they have found material that is relevant.

confiar = consign ; lodge. 

Example: There ought to be a special kind of Hell to which poor citators can be consigned.Example: The actual report has been lodged at the British Library but has not been published.

more:

» confiar aput + stock in .

Example: He falls hopelessly for her and makes a difficult sacrifice in the hopes of winning her affection, but she's too nihilistic to put any stock in love.

» confiar Algo a Alguienentrust [instrust] .

Example: The early libraries in England were often gifts of individuals entrusted to the guardianship of their respective municipalities.

» confiar enbe sanguine aboutlook tocount onbank onrely on/uponhave + confidence intake + stock intake + Nombre + on trustaccept + Nombre + on trust .

Example: Not many public sector SLIS were at all sanguine about their future levels of IT resourcing.

Example: Those with more faith than I look to gigantic electronic archives maintained by governments and private companies that will ensure the indefinite survival of the electronic records of humankind.

Example: Bookstores can no longer count on customers buying books if there is a more attractive entertainment option.

Example: Don't bank on it, there can be bright sunshine, hailstones, drizzle, pouring rain and snowflurries in any given hour of the day.

Example: When BNB began publication in 1950 it relied upon the fourteenth edition of DC.

Example: The only way to deal with this effectively is to have confidence in who you are.

Example: But, luckily, we've ended up better off than we ever have been, probably because it caused us to take stock in what's really important.

Example: We take it on trust that the drugs our doctors prescribe are safe and effective -- but this special investigation exposes huge failings in the system.

Example: A difficulty with their analysis is that one has been obliged to accept it on trust; very little empirical evidence is provided.

» confiar (en)trust (in)have + faith (in) .

Example: We trust that, if revision was suggested, you took this advice and that the points are now clear in your mind.

Example: To reinvigorate libraries for the future, librarians must focus on mission not method; they must seek solutions that are new and creative; and they must have faith in themselves.

» confiar enbe sanguine aboutlook tocount onbank onrely on/uponhave + confidence intake + stock intake + Nombre + on trustaccept + Nombre + on trust .

Example: Not many public sector SLIS were at all sanguine about their future levels of IT resourcing.

Example: Those with more faith than I look to gigantic electronic archives maintained by governments and private companies that will ensure the indefinite survival of the electronic records of humankind.

Example: Bookstores can no longer count on customers buying books if there is a more attractive entertainment option.

Example: Don't bank on it, there can be bright sunshine, hailstones, drizzle, pouring rain and snowflurries in any given hour of the day.

Example: When BNB began publication in 1950 it relied upon the fourteenth edition of DC.

Example: The only way to deal with this effectively is to have confidence in who you are.

Example: But, luckily, we've ended up better off than we ever have been, probably because it caused us to take stock in what's really important.

Example: We take it on trust that the drugs our doctors prescribe are safe and effective -- but this special investigation exposes huge failings in the system.

Example: A difficulty with their analysis is that one has been obliged to accept it on trust; very little empirical evidence is provided.

» confiar (en)trust (in)have + faith (in) .

Example: We trust that, if revision was suggested, you took this advice and that the points are now clear in your mind.

Example: To reinvigorate libraries for the future, librarians must focus on mission not method; they must seek solutions that are new and creative; and they must have faith in themselves.

» confiar en el futurotrust in + the future .

Example: A stone monument carries a plaque that reads 'To plant a tree is to trust in the future'.

» confiar en el instintofly by + the seat of + Posesivo + pants .

Example: One of the persistent arguments about Mr. Gorbachev is whether he ever had a clear strategic vision, or was flying by the seat of his pants.

» confiar en lo que Alguien dicetake + Nombre + at/for + Posesivo + word .

Example: Let's try for a minute to take the religious conservatives at their word and define marriage as the Bible does.

» confiar en + Posesivo + instintostrust + Posesivo + (own) instincts .

Example: Perhaps Giovanni should have trusted his instincts when he laid eyes on Rappaccini as the scientist tended to his perverse garden.

» confiar en quebe confident that .

Example: Nobody can be confident that the US yet has a workable solution to its banking disaster.

» confiar intimidadesconfide + intimacies .

Example: In 1985, the average US citizen had three friends in whom to confide intimacies; by 2004, the figure had slipped to two, and one American in four had no confidants at all.

» confiar + Posesivo + vida en manos deput + Posesivo + life in the hands of .

Example: He didn't settle for the cancer doctor at his local hospital -- instead, he put his life in the hands of one of America's best cancer doctors.

» confiarse demasiadobe lulled into a false sense of securitybe lulled into a false sense of .

Example: Our starting point is that in order to do justice to the importance of the issue of their own material welfare and that of the women they work with, women social workers must not be lulled into a false sense of security about 'progress' in this respect.

Example: Many in the crowd were lulled into a false sense of calm and nostalgia while others waited with bated breath for the real surprises to begin.

» confiar un secretotell + a secret .

Example: Fully 50% of the respondents to my survey say the person to whom they're most likely to tell a secret is their significant other.

Confiado synonyms

sure in spanish: Por supuesto, pronunciation: ʃʊr part of speech: adjective trustworthy in spanish: digno de confianza, pronunciation: trʌstwɜrði part of speech: adjective trusty in spanish: fiel, pronunciation: trʌsti part of speech: adjective
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