Definition
The act of making or becoming firm and stable, or the process of securing something in place.
Etymology
From Latin 'fidus' meaning firm or faithful, combined with the suffix '-ation' denoting a process or state. The root evolved through Middle English to describe the establishment of permanence or security.
Kelly Says
This word shows how Latin root 'fidus' (firm) also gave us 'confidence' and 'fidelity'—all sharing that core idea of stability and trustworthiness that makes sense whether you're securing an object or trusting a person.
Translations
BNবাংলা
বিশ্বাস
bi-sh-wa-as
CACatalà
confiança
kon-fi-an-sa
DEDeutsch
Vertrauen
ver-trau-en
ESEspañol
fiducia
fi-doo-thee-a
FISuomi
luottamus
lout-ta-mus
FRFrançais
fidation
fi-da-syohn
HIहिन्दी
विश्वास
vish-vaas
HUMagyar
bizalom
bi-za-lom
IDBahasa Indonesia
kepercayaan
ke-pe-ra-cayaan
ITItaliano
fiducia
fi-doo-thee-a
KMKM
បទពិសោធ
ba-te-vi-so-th
MSBahasa Melayu
kepercayaan
ke-pe-ra-cayaan
NLNederlands
fiducie
fi-doo-thee
PLPolski
zaufanie
zau-fa-nie
PTPortuguês
fidúcia
fi-doo-thee-a
RORomână
încredere
in-kre-de-re
RUРусский
доверия
do-ve-ri-ya
SVSvenska
förtroende
fort-ro-en-de
SWKiswahili
kuamini
koo-a-mi-ni
TAதமிழ்
நம்பிக்கை
nam-pi-kai
TEతెలుగు
విశ్వాసం
vi-shwa-sam
THไทย
ความเชื่อมั่น
kwan-khwam chee-mu-măn
TLTL
pagtitiwala
pa-gi-ti-ti-wa-la
UKУкраїнська
довіря
do-vya
VITiếng Việt
tin tưởng
tin-tươ-ng