v. con·fid·ed, con·fid·ing, con·fides v.tr. 1. To tell (something) in confidence: confided a secret to his friend. 2. To give as a responsibility or put into another's care: confided the task of drafting the report to her assistant. v.intr. To disclose private matters in confidence: He knew he could confide in his parents. [Middle English, to rely on, from Old French confider, from Latin cōnfīdere : com-, intensive pref.; see COM- + fīdere, to trust; see bheidh- in the Appendix of Indo-European roots.] con·fider n. |
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