Confidence vs Who - What's the difference?
confidence | who |
Passive self-assurance.
Expression or feeling of certainty.
The quality of trusting.
Information held in secret.
(interrogative pronoun) What person or people; which person or people (used in a direct or indirect question).
(relative pronoun) The person or people that.
A person under discussion; a question of which person.
* {{quote-news, year=2008, date=March 21, author=The New York Times, title=Movie Guide and Film Series, work=New York Times
, passage=A wham-bam caper flick, efficiently directed by Roger Donaldson, that fancifully revisits the mysterious whos and speculative hows of a 1971 London bank heist. }}
As a noun confidence
is passive self-assurance.As an acronym who is
the world health organization.confidence
English
(wikipedia confidence)Noun
(-)Quotations
* {{quote-book, year=2006, author= , title=Internal Combustion , chapter=1citation, passage=But electric vehicles and the batteries that made them run became ensnared in corporate scandals, fraud, and monopolistic corruption that shook the confidence of the nation and inspired automotive upstarts.}} * 1956 — , The City and the Stars , p 39 *: Khedron hesitated for a moment, wondering how far he should take Jeserac into his confidence . He knew that Jeserac was kindly and well-intentioned, but he also knew that he must be bound by the same taboos that controlled everyone on Diaspar.
Antonyms
* (self-assurance ): fearDerived terms
* confidence interval * confidence level * confidence trickwho
English
Pronoun
- Who is that? (direct question)
- I don't know who it is. (indirect question)
- It was a nice man who helped us.
Usage notes
When "who" (or the other relative pronouns "that" and "which") is used as the subject of a relative clause, the verb agrees with the antecedent of the pronoun. Thus "I who am...", "He who is...", "You who are...", etc.Noun
(en noun)citation
