TRUST vs COMMIT: NOUN
- Keeping; care.
- The state of being confided to another's care or guard; charge.
- The state of being confided in and relied on; the state of one to whom something is intrusted.
- Specifically, in mod. com. usage, an organization for the control of several corporations under one direction by the device of a transfer by the stockholders in each corporation of at least a majority of the stock to a central committee or board of trustees, who issue in return to such stockholders respectively certificates showing in effect that, although they have parted with their stock and the consequent voting power, they are still entitled to dividends or to share in the profits—the object being to enable the trustees to elect directors in all the corporations, to control and suspend at pleasure the work of any, and thus to economize expenses, regulate production, and defeat competition.
- Something confided to one's faith; a charge given or received in confidence; something which one is bound in duty and in honor to keep inviolate; a duty incumbent on one.
- That which is committed or intrusted to one, as for safe-keeping or use.
- The relation between persons and property which arises when the legal ownership is given to one person, called the trustee, and the beneficial enjoyment or advantages of ownership are given or reserved to another, the cestui que trust or beneficiary.
- The right on the part of such other to enjoy the use or the profits or to require a disposal of the property for his benefit.
- In law: A confidence reposed in a person by making him the nominal owner of property which he is to hold, use, or dispose of for the benefit of another.
- Confidence in the ability and intention of one who does not pay ready money to pay at some definite or indefinite time in the future: as, to buy or sell on trust.
- Credit.
- That on which one relies or in which he confides; ground of reliance, confidence, or hope.
- Confident expectation; assured anticipation; dependence upon something future or contingent as if present or actual; hope.
- Reliance on the veracity, integrity, justice, friendship, or other virtue or sound principle of another; a firm reliance on promises or on laws or principles; confidence; belief.
- A combination of firms or corporations for the purpose of reducing competition and controlling prices throughout a business or industry.
- An institution or organization directed by trustees.
- The property so held.
- The confidence reposed in a trustee when giving the trustee legal title to property to administer for another, together with the trustee's obligation regarding that property and the beneficiary.
- A legal relationship in which one party holds a title to property while another party has the entitlement to the beneficial use of that property.
- Reliance on the intention and ability of a purchaser to pay in the future; credit.
- Reliance on something in the future; hope.
- Something committed into the care of another; a charge.
- Custody; care.
- One in which confidence is placed.
- The condition and resulting obligation of having confidence placed in one.
- Firm belief in the integrity, ability, or character of a person or thing; confidence or reliance.
- A trustful relationship
- Complete confidence in a person or plan etc
- Certainty based on past experience
- Something (as property) held by one party (the trustee) for the benefit of another (the beneficiary)
- A consortium of independent organizations formed to limit competition by controlling the production and distribution of a product or service
- The trait of trusting; of believing in the honesty and reliability of others
- The act of committing (e.g. a database transaction or source code into a source control repository), making it a permanent change.
- A game of cards.
TRUST vs COMMIT: VERB
- Confer a trust upon
- Expect and wish
- Be confident about something
- Have confidence or faith in
- Allow without fear
- Extend credit to
- Engage in or perform
- To commit an offence; especially, to fornicate.
- To join a contest; to match; -- followed by with.
- Confer a trust upon
- Give entirely to a specific person, activity, or cause
- Make an investment
- Perform an act, usually with a negative connotation
- Cause to be admitted; of persons to an institution
TRUST vs COMMIT: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To be confident; hope.
- To have or place reliance; depend.
- To extend credit to.
- To place in the care of another person or in a situation deemed safe; entrust.
- To give credence to; believe.
- To expect with assurance; assume.
- To have confidence in allowing (someone) to use, know, or look after something.
- To have or place confidence in; depend on.
- To sin; esp., to be incontinent.
- To pledge, obligate, or devote one's own self.
- To refer (a legislative bill, for example) to a committee.
- To bind, obligate, or devote, as by a pledge.
- To make known the views of (oneself) on an issue.
- To put into a place to be disposed of or kept safe.
- To place officially in confinement or custody, as in a mental health facility.
- To consign for future use or for preservation.
- To put in trust or charge; entrust.
- To do, perform, or perpetrate.
TRUST vs COMMIT: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To learn by heart; to memorize.
- To refer or intrust it to a committee or others, to be considered and reported.
- To confound.
- To pledge or bind; to compromise, expose, or endanger by some decisive act or preliminary step; -- often used reflexively.
- To join for a contest; to match; -- followed by with.
- To do; to perpetrate, as a crime, sin, or fault.
- To put in charge of a jailor; to imprison.
- To give in trust; to put into charge or keeping; to intrust; to consign; -- used with to, unto.
TRUST vs COMMIT: OTHER WORD TYPES
- I won't pay her debts anymore"
- (chiefly archaic) extend credit to
- An obsolete spelling of trussed, preterit and past participle of truss.
- To give credit for something due; sell on credit: as, to trust recklessly.
- To repose confidence; place faith or reliance; rely: with on or in.
- To entertain a lively hope; feel sure; expect confidently: followed by a clause.
- To give credit to; supply with goods or something of value in the expectation of future payment.
- To commit, consign, or allow with confidence; permit to be in some place, position, or company, or to do some particular thing, without misgiving or fear of consequences: as, to trust one's self to another's guidance.
- To intrust: with with before the object confided.
- To believe; credit; receive with credence, as a statement, assertion, or the like.
- To place or repose confidence in (a person); rely upon; depend upon.
- (idiom) (in trust) In the possession or care of a trustee.
- Of persons to an institution
- Cause to be admitted
- Transfer to another place so something can be kept or preserved
- Make a set of changes permanent
- To consign to prison; to exercise the power of imprisoning.
- To commit adultery.
- Synonyms Intrust, Confide, Commit, Consign, agree in general in expressing a transfer from the care or keeping of one to that of another. To intrust is to give to another in trust, to put into another's care with confidence in him. Confide is still more expressive of trust or confidence, especially in the receiver's discretion or integrity; the word is now used most of secrets, but may be used more widely. Commit implies some measure of formality in the act; it is the most general of these words. Consign implies still greater formality in the surrender: as, to consign goods to a person for sale; to consign the dead to the grave. To consign seems the most final as an act; to commit stands next to it in this respect.
- To speak or act in such a manner as virtually to bind one's self to a certain line of conduct, or to the approval of a certain opinion or course of action: as, he has committed himself to the support of the foreign policy of the government; avoid committing yourself.
- To consider; regard; account.
- To join or put together unfitly or heterogeneously; match improperly or incongruously; confound: a Latinism.
- To do or perform (especially something reprehensible, wrong, inapt, etc.); perpetrate: as, to commit murder, treason, felony, or trespass; to commit a blunder or a solecism.
- To memorize; learn by heart: a shortened colloquial form of the phrase to commit to memory: as, have you committed your speech?
- In legislation, to refer or intrust to a committee or select number of persons for their consideration and report.
- To consign to custody by official warrant, as a criminal or a lunatic; specifically, to send to prison for a short term or for trial.
- To engage; involve; put or bring into risk or danger by a preliminary step or decision which cannot be recalled; compromise.
- To give in trust; put into charge or keeping; intrust; surrender; give up; consign: with to or unto.
TRUST vs COMMIT: RELATED WORDS
- Cartel, Combine, Commit, Intrust, Desire, Reliance, Swear, Rely, Bank, Hope, Confide, Believe, Entrust, Faith, Confidence
- Intrust, Place, Trust, Put, Confide, Institutionalize, Pull, Send, Charge, Entrust, Give, Dedicate, Invest, Devote, Perpetrate
TRUST vs COMMIT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Trustworthy, Cartel, Combine, Commit, Intrust, Desire, Reliance, Rely, Bank, Hope, Confide, Believe, Entrust, Faith, Confidence
- Intrust, Place, Trust, Put, Confide, Institutionalize, Pull, Send, Charge, Entrust, Give, Dedicate, Invest, Devote, Perpetrate
TRUST vs COMMIT: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Berks County Trust Company to American Bank and Trust Co.
- Certificate of Trust is helpful for transacting trust matters.
- Property held in trust for distribution to a remainder beneficiary when the trust terminates or property held in trust in perpetuity.
- Therefore, the trust document should identify who should receive the trust assets upon the death of the trust beneficiary.
- Passed since the affidavit arizona trust and helps transfer trust passes away with the information is called a trust receipts and the careful records.
- The trust deeds of the JJ Trust and the GH Trust were essentially the same.
- When trust is betrayed by sexual abuse, the victim is left unsure of whom to trust and frequently develops a deficit of self trust.
- As an alternative to your AB trust you might wish to create a simple revocable living trust, using living trust forms.
- In contrast to a testamentary trust, a living trust or inter vivos trust goes into effect while you are alive.
- Revoking a family trust involves dissolving the trust and transferring any assets owned by the trust back to yourself.
- Each parent commit ID is the full commit ID.
- Hovering over the commit, displays the complete commit information.
- Entrapment happens when law enforcement officers get a person to commit a crime they would otherwise not commit.
- Here is a simple way for removing the wrong commit instead of undoing changes with a revert commit.
- If no commit reference is specified it starts from the commit referred to by the HEAD pointer.
- Returns information about a commit, including commit message and committer information.
- How can I add a diff of the commit into the commit message window?
- Blocking Property and Prohibiting Transactions with Persons Who Commit, Threaten to Commit, or Support Terrorism, Exec.
- Select files to stage for a commit and type in a commit message to create a commit.
- Split commit message field into two: the commit subject and the commit description.
TRUST vs COMMIT: QUESTIONS
- Can a founder of a private trust earn money through trust?
- When to use a trust deed constitution for a charitable trust?
- How do I transfer a child trust Trust (CTT) to Jisa?
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- Is Sri Siva Vishnu temple trust a tax-exempt religious trust?
- Are Trust Company fees separated between investment management and trust administration?
- When did Southfield Grange Trust join co-op Academies Trust?
- Why Ashoka Trust consultancy for Trust registration in Uttar Pradesh?
- Should we trust the lord or trust our own understanding?
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