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Faith Very Common

Faith has 6 different meanings across 2 categories:

Noun · Proper Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

a strong belief in a supernatural power or powers that control human destiny

"he lost his faith but not his morality"

2

complete confidence in a person or plan etc

"he cherished the faith of a good woman"

"the doctor-patient relationship is based on trust"

3

an institution to express belief in a divine power

"he was raised in the Baptist religion"

"a member of his own faith contradicted him"

4

loyalty or allegiance to a cause or a person

"keep the faith"

"they broke faith with their investors"

5

A trust or confidence in the intentions or abilities of a person, object, or ideal from prior empirical evidence.

"After watching her recover from three previous surgeries without complications, my faith in her ability to heal this injury was completely restored."

In plain English: Faith is the belief that something is true even though you cannot see proof for it right now.

"Her faith in her friends never wavered, even when things got difficult."

Usage: Use faith to describe trust placed without sufficient empirical evidence or proof. It differs from belief based on facts by relying instead on hope or conviction despite uncertainty.

Proper Noun
1

A female given name from English.

"The baby shower guest book was filled out by Faith, Sarah, and Emily in honor of their new niece."

Example Sentences
"Her faith in her friends never wavered, even when things got difficult." noun
"She kept her faith in his ability to turn things around despite all the odds." noun
"His faith was tested when he lost everything overnight but never gave up hope." noun
"The community gathered with renewed faith after hearing the encouraging words from the speaker." noun
Related Terms
belief religion believe religious hope religious belief god iman nudifidian disespouse sandemanianism protestantism confidence nonempirical honest religiophobia south dakota implicit treachery neonomianism
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
belief theological virtue institution commitment
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
apophatism cataphatism doctrine of analogy cult ecclesiasticism mysticism nature worship revealed religion theism paganism Christianity Unitarianism Hinduism Brahmanism Jainism Sikhism Buddhism Taoism Shinto Manichaeism Mithraism Zoroastrianism Bahaism shamanism Wicca church Judaism Khalsa Scientology established church sect

Origin

The word faith entered English from Old French, where it originally referred to trust or loyalty before replacing the native Germanic term gelēafa. Although its Latin root contained a 'd' sound that evolved into a 'th', the spelling reflects this shift as the language moved through French and into Middle English.

Rhyming Words
ith dith tith sith gith rith kith vith eith with lith leith saith edith grith crith stith laith whith swith
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