Idioms for trust

    in trust, in the position of being left in the care or guardianship of another: She left money to her uncle to keep in trust for her children.

Origin of trust

1175–1225; (noun) Middle English < Old Norse traust trust (cognate with German Trost comfort); (v.) Middle English trusten < Old Norse treysta, derivative of traust

SYNONYMS FOR trust

synonym study for trust

1. Trust, assurance, confidence imply a feeling of security. Trust implies instinctive unquestioning belief in and reliance upon something: to have trust in one's parents. Confidence implies conscious trust because of good reasons, definite evidence, or past experience: to have confidence in the outcome of events. Assurance implies absolute confidence and certainty: to feel an assurance of victory.

OTHER WORDS FROM trust

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH trust

board committee council panel trust

British Dictionary definitions for in trust

trust
/ (trʌst) /

noun

verb

Derived forms of trust

trustable, adjective trustability, noun truster, noun

Word Origin for trust

C13: from Old Norse traust; related to Old High German trost solace

Cultural definitions for in trust

trust

A combination of firms or corporations for the purpose of reducing competition and controlling prices throughout a business or industry. Trusts are generally prohibited or restricted by antitrust legislation. (Compare monopoly.)

Idioms and Phrases with in trust (1 of 2)

in trust

In the possession or care of a trustee, as in The money was held in trust for the children's education. This expression implies having confidence in someone (the trustee). [Mid-1500s]

Idioms and Phrases with in trust (2 of 2)

trust

see brain trust; in trust.