The word "trusty" (for objects) has been used mostly in cowboy movies and comedies, and the words "trusted" or "trustworthy" are the most common adjectives applied to a person.
Examples : "He was a trusted friend."
Examples : "The banker had always been trustworthy."
The word 'trusting' is the present participle of the verb 'to trust'; the present participle of the verb is a gerund (verbal noun), an abstract noun, and an adjective. The words trust, trusting, trustiness, and trustability are abstract nouns.
Yes, it is. But it is much less frequently used than the adjective trusting (present participle of the verb to trust). The past participle adjective trusted indicates that one is being trusted.
The part of speech for trust depends on how it is used. See the examples below.Her parents started a trust fund for her the day she was born. (trust = adjective)Without trust, our marriage fell apart. (trust = abstract noun)I trust that this will not happen again. (trust = verb)
Gullible, naive, green, trusting, unsophisticated.Gullible, naive, green, trusting, unsophisticated.Gullible, naive, green, trusting, unsophisticated.Gullible, naive, green, trusting, unsophisticated.
believing in someone that they can or wont do something. im trusting you not to burn the house down im trusting you with my car im trusting you to pay me back this money
Yes. The adjective gullible means excessively easy to convince or deceive. A gullible person is one who will accept what they are told (or asked to believe) with few or no questions about the validity of the information.
The major synonyms for trusting are two that suggest the person is "too trusting" -- credulous and gullible. There does not seem to be another good term for someone who has justifiable faith in others.
Trusting
trusting yourself.
Trusting Wives - 1929 was released on: USA: 23 June 1929
Trusting someone sexually is trusting the person he/she is having intercourse with.When you fully trust each other,this means that you are confident that your partner will not leave you after getting intimate with you or harm your body.
No. A character trait is a quality that a person habitually has, and therefore is an adjective or a noun based on an adjective describing that person. "Surprise" is a noun not an adjective. Even "surprised", although an adjective, is still not a character trait because it is not habitual. Some character traits might make someone easier to surprise, such as being gullible or its positive counterpart, trusting.