Advertisement
Advertisement
confidante
[ kon-fi-dant, -dahnt, kon-fi-dant, -dahnt ]
noun
- a woman to whom secrets are confided or with whom private matters and problems are discussed.
- Furniture. confidente.
confidante
/ ˌkɒnfɪˈdænt; ˈkɒnfɪˌdænt /
noun
- a person, esp a woman, to whom private matters are confided
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of confidante1
Example Sentences
"He said he could still give executive orders and accomplish a lot. He told me not to worry", said Linton, a conservative politician and one of the president's close confidantes at the time.
But those teams had vets that James trusted, a close confidante in Jared Dudley in 2020 and later, a former championship teammate in Tristan Thompson.
Public Health Service since 1917 and was a confidante of President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The emails came after billionaire and Trump confidante Elon Musk tweeted Saturday that workers would "shortly receive an email requesting to understand what they got done last week".
A good number of Darrow’s friends and confidantes had no trouble believing he was behind the bribes.
Advertisement
Related yvlogs
Confidante Vs. Confidant Vs. Confident
What’s the difference between confidante, confidant, and confident?
The word confidante is a gender-specific form of confidant, a noun meaning someone you feel comfortable telling secret or private things to—a person you confide in. Confidante is specifically applied to women. Confident is an adjective that means sure of oneself or one’s abilities, or having a high level of certainty about something.
Very rarely, the word confident can be used as a noun meaning the same thing as confidant, but we’re pretty confident almost no one uses it this way. We’re also sorry to report that there’s a kind of sofa called a confidente that can also be called a confidante, but honestly you’ll be better off if you just forget we ever said anything about it.
Confidant and confidante are borrowed from French, which has grammatical gender, so some words end differently depending on whether they are applied to men or women (with e being the feminine ending). This happens in a few other pairs of words in English, like blond and blonde, though in many cases the term without the e has become largely gender-neutral. This is the case with confidant, which is the more commonly used of the two.
What’s the best way to be confident that you’re using the right word? Just remember that the ending of both confidant and confidante sounds like the more formal pronunciation of aunt—your aunt could be your confidant (as could your commandant, the ending of which also sounds the same).
The ending of confident, on the other hand, sounds like dent.
Here’s an example of confidante and confident used correctly in the same sentence. (The word confidante could be replaced with confidant if you wanted to make the term gender-neutral.)
Example: I am confident that what I confide to my confidante stays confidential.
Want to learn more? Read the full breakdown of the difference between confidante, confidant, and confident.
Quiz yourself on confidante vs. confidant vs. confident!
Should confident, confidant, or confidante be used in the following sentence?
She felt _____ that her entry would win the contest.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse