trustworthy

/ˈtrʌstwɜːði/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈtrʌstwɜːrði/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈtrəst-ˌwər-t͟hē/ (ame, mw)

trustworthy — adjective

  • trustworthypositive
  • more trustworthycomparative
  • most trustworthysuperlative

1. You describe a person, organization, or piece of information as trustworthy when

1.形容詞B2
釋義

You describe a person, organization, or piece of information as trustworthy when you feel sure that they are honest, will tell the truth, and will do what they promise.

例句

Pim has always been a trustworthy friend who never breaks a promise.

trustworthy + noun (friend, colleague, source)

Kwame proved himself trustworthy by returning the wallet he found on the bus.

prove + reflexive pronoun + trustworthy

同義詞
  • reliable

    More focused on consistency and dependability than honesty; a reliable car is trustworthy in performance, but not necessarily in character.

  • dependable

    Very close in meaning, but 'dependable' especially emphasizes that you can count on someone or something in difficult or important situations.

  • honest

    Narrower in scope — focuses on truthfulness and sincerity rather than general reliability or trust.

  • credible

    Used mainly for information, evidence, or explanations; less common for describing people's character.

反義詞
  • untrustworthy

    Direct opposite; describes someone or something that cannot be trusted.

  • unreliable

    Cannot be depended on to perform consistently or tell the truth.

  • dishonest

    Specifically about lacking truthfulness or being deceptive.

文法句型

trustworthy + noun

be + trustworthy

prove/consider/deem + someone/something + trustworthy

用法筆記

When applied to people, 'trustworthy' describes character — the person is honest and keeps promises. When applied to information, data, or sources, it means the content is accurate and reliable. The usual comparative pattern is 'more trustworthy' and 'most trustworthy', not 'trustworthier' / 'trustworthiest'.

常見錯誤

She is a very trustful assistant.
She is a very trustworthy assistant.
💡'trustful' means someone who trusts others easily, not someone who deserves trust.
The information comes from a trustable source.
The information comes from a trustworthy source.
💡'trustable' is very uncommon in modern English; 'trustworthy' is the standard adjective.