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doubt
[ dout ]
verb (used with object)
- to be uncertain about; consider questionable or unlikely; hesitate to believe:
The police have good reason to doubt his alibi.
- to distrust; regard with suspicion:
I doubted the salesman, so we decided to check with other dealers.
- Archaic. to fear; be apprehensive about.
verb (used without object)
- to be uncertain about something; be undecided in opinion or belief:
The priest told me that it was normal to doubt, but encouraged me to nurture my faith.
noun
- a feeling of uncertainty about the truth, reality, or nature of something:
We all had our doubts about your mysterious Canadian girlfriend since no one has ever seen her in person.
Synonyms: irresolution, indecision
- distrust or suspicion:
Voters naturally held some doubt about the abrupt change in policy direction issued by city hall.
- a general feeling of uncertainty, worry, or concern: Set your doubts aside, and listen to my business idea with an open mind.
As soon as I'd dropped out of school to become a full-time musician, I was full of doubt—what if I’d made a terrible mistake?
Set your doubts aside, and listen to my business idea with an open mind.
- a state of affairs such as to occasion uncertainty.
- Obsolete. fear; dread.
doubt
/ daʊt /
noun
- uncertainty about the truth, fact, or existence of something (esp in the phrases in doubt, without doubt, beyond a shadow of doubt, etc)
- often plural lack of belief in or conviction about something
all his doubts about the project disappeared
- an unresolved difficulty, point, etc
- philosophy the methodical device, esp in the philosophy of Descartes, of identifying certain knowledge as the residue after rejecting any proposition which might, however improbably, be false
- obsolete.fear
- give someone the benefit of the doubtto presume someone suspected of guilt to be innocent; judge leniently
- no doubtalmost certainly
verb
- tr; may take a clause as object to be inclined to disbelieve
I doubt we are late
- tr to distrust or be suspicious of
he doubted their motives
- intr to feel uncertainty or be undecided
- tr; may take a clause as object to be inclined to believe
- archaic.tr to fear
- I wouldn't doubt someoneI would expect nothing else from someone
Usage Note
Usage
Derived Forms
- ˈdoubtably, adverb
- ˈdoubtingly, adverb
- ˈdoubter, noun
- ˈdoubtable, adjective
Other Words From
- doubt·a·ble adjective
- doubt·a·bly adverb
- doubt·er noun
- doubt·ing·ly adverb
- doubt·ing·ness noun
- non·doubt·a·ble adjective
- non·doubt·er noun
- non·doubt·ing adjective
- non·doubt·ing·ly adverb
- o·ver·doubt verb (used with object)
- pre·doubt noun verb
- pre·doubt·er noun
- un·doubt·a·ble adjective
- un·doubt·ing adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of doubt1
Word History and Origins
Origin of doubt1
Idioms and Phrases
- beyond a / the shadow of a doubt, with certainty; definitely. Also beyond a doubt, beyond doubt.
- in doubt, in a state of uncertainty or suspense:
His appointment to the position is still in doubt.
- no doubt,
- certainly:
There is no doubt an element of truth in what you say.
- without doubt, unquestionably; certainly.
More idioms and phrases containing doubt
see beyond a doubt ; cast doubt on ; give the benefit of the doubt ; no doubt ; shadow of a doubt .Example Sentences
But a department insider rejects that characterisation, and says: “No one doubts the issue is huge, but any solution is expensive – everything is a trade-off.”
With an obduracy that Trump no doubt admired, Stefanik refused to resign.
It is argued that this removes any doubt about what to do if a concern is raised about the safety of a child.
The magistrates agreed that “given the state of the postal system” they'd give Khan the benefit of the doubt and another trial date would be set.
Another man was convicted for her murder, but in 2016, a judge dismissed those charges after deciding prosecutors could “no longer prove the murder case” against him beyond a reasonable doubt.
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Related Words
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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