different between factual vs trustworthy
factual
English
Etymology
fact +? -al, modified by analogy with actual.
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /?fæk(t)?u?l/, /?fæk(t)??l/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?fak(t)???l/, /?fak(t)??l/
- (General New Zealand) IPA(key): /?f?k(t)???l/, /?f?k(t)??l/
Adjective
factual (comparative more factual, superlative most factual)
- Pertaining to or consisting of objective claims.
- 2012, D.C. Kline, Dominion and Wealth: A Critical Analysis of Karl Marx’ Theory of Commercial Law, Springer Science & Business Media (?ISBN), page 34:
- If, as Marx claimed, these factual views were held by the ideologists of the nineteenth century and if these factual claims could be proven false, then Marx could claim to have refuted certain tenets of capitalist political philosophy on a purely […]
- 2014, Derek Matravers, Fiction and Narrative, OUP Oxford (?ISBN):
- Thus, the approach has more flexibility than Lamarque and Olsen's approach; in particular, it is open to the possibility that false factual claims do affect our understanding of, and our evaluation of, fictional narratives.
- 2012, D.C. Kline, Dominion and Wealth: A Critical Analysis of Karl Marx’ Theory of Commercial Law, Springer Science & Business Media (?ISBN), page 34:
- True, accurate, corresponding to reality.
- 2007, Robin Parrish, Fearless, Bethany House Pub (?ISBN)
- He knew Guardian's real name. Did he dare play that card? "Yes ma'am, that's factual information. All of it."
- 2007, Robin Parrish, Fearless, Bethany House Pub (?ISBN)
Derived terms
Related terms
- fact
- counterfactual
- de facto
Translations
Further reading
- factual in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- factual in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
Anagrams
- caul fat
Portuguese
Alternative forms
- fatual
Adjective
factual m or f (plural factuais, comparable)
- factual (consisting of facts)
Spanish
Adjective
factual (plural factuales)
- factual
- Synonym: fáctico
factual From the web:
- what factual mean
- what factual text
- what factual recount
- what does factual mean
- what is a factual example
trustworthy
English
Etymology
From trust +? -worthy.
Pronunciation
- enPR: tr?st-'wûr-th?, IPA(key): /?t??st.w??.ði/
Adjective
trustworthy (comparative trustworthier or more trustworthy, superlative trustworthiest or most trustworthy)
- Deserving of trust, reliable.
Synonyms
Antonyms
- untrustworthy
Derived terms
- untrustworthy
Translations
See also
- trustful
trustworthy From the web:
- what trustworthy means
- what's trustworthy in italian
- what trustworthy means in french
- trustworthy what does it mean
- trustworthy what does it mean in spanish
- trustworthy what do it mean
- what are trustworthy news sources
- what is trustworthy computing
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- factual vs trustworthy
- skirmish vs brush
- shrewd vs oblique
- heed vs observance
- fearful vs violent
- pacifying vs mollifying
- glue vs seal
- objectionable vs nasty
- dreadful vs ghastly
- quaint vs oddball
- jackass vs numskull
- wounded vs wretched
- staggering vs shocking
- adjoining vs attaching
- acuity vs magnificence
- unruly vs terrorist
- inmate vs citizen
- ardent vs sympathetic
- government vs generalship
- unusually vs particularly