prepositions - Confide in or confide to - English Language Learners . . . I usually say I confided my doubt to Mr X You can confide in me But I have seen a sentence You should not confide *to* stranger Is the above sentence right or should we replace confide to with confide in Can anyone enlighten me where to use in and to with confide
trust in vs confide in - English Language Learners Stack Exchange Did you look up the definition of confide in any of those dictionaries? For example, in Oxford Learner's Dictionaries, it says "confide: to tell somebody secrets and personal information that you do not want other people to know" which seems very different from trust
meaning - He wasnt who I confided in daily to vs He wasnt who I . . . Therefore 'He wasn't who I confided in daily' means he wasn't a person I trusted enough to share my innermost thoughts and secrets with To rant to someone, on the other hand, means to talk in a noisy, excited, or declamatory manner, usually expressing (at length) a complaint or negative opinion about someone or something
word request - English Language Learners Stack Exchange We often share our secrets or very private personal information with someone that we trust, like our best friends or people that we know very well Do we have a verb to say that we talk with someone,
word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange I was wondering whether Americans use quot;fluster quot; intransitively The only dictionary which introduces the verb as both transitive and intransitive one is quot;The Free Dictionary quot; as
Difference between trust, trust in, and trust on According to LDOCE, Trust in is a phrasal verb which is formal and means to believe in someone or something as in We trust in God Trust means to believe that someone is honest or will not do anything bad or wrong as in I just don’t trust him When you trust someone for example you tell them your secrets However, trust can mean the same as trust in in the sense to be sure that something is