No, a noun is a person, place, or thing. Trustworthy is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.
The noun for "trustworthy" is "trustworthiness". Another noun form is trust.
Integrity is the word that defines strong moral character, which encompasses honesty, trustworthiness, and adherence to ethical principles.
Ethos appeals to an audience's sense of credibility and trustworthiness. It is particularly effective with audiences who value authority, expertise, and integrity in the speaker or source of information.
The word honesty is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun.
The noun form for the adjective cynical is cynicalness. Another noun form is cynicism.
Virtues is a noun.
It is an abstract noun.
(trustworthy --> adjective / trustworthiness --> noun)Trustworthiness is a main trait of my friends because a friend who is trustworthy is someone you could trust and depend on.
No, the plural noun 'quantities' is a word for amounts, weights, numbers, etc.The noun 'honesty' is a word for sincerity, trustworthiness, virtue, etc.You may be thinking of the word 'qualities'. The word 'honesty' is a word for a quality possessed by a person.
A politician's trustworthiness is always in question.
The abstract noun forms for the adjective reliable are reliableness and reliability.
mabey
Pretty much any time you would use trust you can substitute trustworthiness.
lii.org
truthfully
reliability, trustworthiness
The word is spelled trustworthiness.
trustworthiness, reliability, and integrity