confident
/ˈkɒnfɪdənt/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈkɑːnfɪdənt/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈkän-fə-dənt -ˌdent/ (ame, mw)
confident — 形容詞
- confidentpositive
- more confidentcomparative
- most confidentsuperlative
1. having a firm belief that you can achieve what you want, or feeling sure that a
有信心;確信
對自己能力或結果有把握
having a firm belief that you can achieve what you want, or feeling sure that a situation will produce the result you hope for
Tamar felt confident before her piano exam because she had practised every day.
Tamar 因為每天練習,所以在鋼琴考試前感到很有信心。
confident before [event] for time-specific certainty
The marketing team is confident that the new campaign will attract more customers.
行銷團隊有信心新的廣告活動能吸引更多顧客。
confident + that-clause for certainty about outcomes
Rafael gave a confident speech to the board and answered every question calmly.
Rafael 向董事會發表了一場充滿自信的演說,冷靜地回答了每個問題。
Anjali felt confident about passing her driving test after weeks of lessons.
經過數週的練習,Anjali 對通過駕照考試感到很有把握。
Despite the storm, the captain remained confident they would reach port before dark.
儘管風雨交加,船長仍堅信他們能在天黑前抵達港口。
- sure
more casual and factual; sure can refer to simple facts ('I'm sure it's Tuesday'), while confident implies inner readiness or positive belief
- certain
stronger and more factual or evidence-based; certain suggests objective grounds, whereas confident involves personal conviction
- assured
more formal; especially in self-assured, which describes calm, poised confidence in social or professional situations
- optimistic
focuses on positive expectations about the future rather than belief in ability; you can be optimistic without being confident
文法句型
confident + that-clause
confident about + noun / -ing form
confident of + noun
confident + noun (attributive: a confident smile)
用法筆記
Commonly followed by about (+ noun or gerund), of (+ noun), or a that-clause (the conjunction that is often dropped in everyday speech). In attributive position — a confident smile, a confident voice — the adjective describes visible behaviour that reveals inner certainty.