Committed vs Noncommittal - What's the difference?
committed | noncommittal |
(commit)
Obligated by a pledge to some course of action.
showing commitment.
Associated in an exclusive (but not necessarily permanent) sexual relationship.
(rhetoric) Required by logic to endorse the conclusion of an argument.
Tending to avoid commitment; lacking certainty or decisiveness; reluctant to give out information or show one's feelings or opinion.
*1818 , S.R. Wells, The American Phrenonological Journal, and other miscellany , v. 10,
*:[He] is candid, open-hearted, and hardly non-commmittal enough for his own interest at times.
As adjectives the difference between committed and noncommittal
is that committed is obligated by a pledge to some course of action while noncommittal is tending to avoid commitment; lacking certainty or decisiveness; reluctant to give out information or show one's feelings or opinion.As a verb committed
is (commit).committed
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(en adjective)noncommittal
English
Alternative forms
* non-commital * noncommital * non-committalAdjective
(en adjective)- The Major's face was noncommittal .
- The noncommittal Indians would give no counsel as to fording.
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