A1 noun Formel #2,717 le plus courant

confidential

/ˌkɒnfɪˈdenʃl/

Confidential describes information that is meant to be kept secret or private. It is used when you should not tell something to other people because it is personal or important.

Exemples

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1

Your personal diary is confidential.

Your personal diary is confidential.

2

The doctor keeps your health records confidential.

The doctor keeps your health records confidential.

3

This is confidential, so don't tell anyone!

This is confidential, so don't tell anyone!

Famille de mots

Nom
confidentiality
Verb
confide
Adverbe
confidentially
Adjectif
confidential
Apparenté
confidence
💡

Astuce mémo

Think of the word 'dent'—if you share confidential information, you might 'dent' (break) someone's trust.

Quiz rapide

Please keep this email _____; do not show it to the rest of the team.

Correct !

La bonne réponse est : confidential

Exemples

1

Your personal diary is confidential.

everyday

Your personal diary is confidential.

2

The doctor keeps your health records confidential.

formal

The doctor keeps your health records confidential.

3

This is confidential, so don't tell anyone!

informal

This is confidential, so don't tell anyone!

4

Students' grades are confidential and not shared with others.

academic

Students' grades are confidential and not shared with others.

5

The company sent a confidential report to the manager.

business

The company sent a confidential report to the manager.

Famille de mots

Nom
confidentiality
Verb
confide
Adverbe
confidentially
Adjectif
confidential
Apparenté
confidence

Collocations courantes

confidential information confidential information
strictly confidential strictly confidential
confidential documents confidential documents
keep something confidential keep something confidential
highly confidential highly confidential

Phrases Courantes

in strict confidence

in strict confidence

confidential matter

confidential matter

treated as confidential

treated as confidential

Souvent confondu avec

confidential vs confident

Confident means feeling sure of yourself, while confidential means secret.

📝

Notes d'usage

Use 'confidential' to describe things like letters, files, or conversations that must stay between a specific group of people. It is more formal than the word 'secret'.

⚠️

Erreurs courantes

Learners often use 'confident' when they mean 'confidential'. Remember that 'confidential' is for secrets, not feelings.

💡

Astuce mémo

Think of the word 'dent'—if you share confidential information, you might 'dent' (break) someone's trust.

📖

Origine du mot

From the Latin 'confidentia', meaning trust or reliance.

Modèles grammaticaux

Always used as an adjective before a noun (e.g., confidential file). Commonly follows the verb 'to keep' (e.g., keep it confidential).
🌍

Contexte culturel

In many English-speaking countries, keeping medical and legal information confidential is a strict legal requirement.

Quiz rapide

Please keep this email _____; do not show it to the rest of the team.

Correct !

La bonne réponse est : confidential

Mots lis

exarchness

C1

The state or quality of being an exarch, specifically referring to the authoritative status or regional jurisdiction of a deputy ruler or high-ranking ecclesiastical official. It describes the inherent power and dignity associated with governing a province or diocese on behalf of a higher sovereign.

perihumer

C1

A technical term referring to the anatomical region or specific tissue structures immediately surrounding the humerus bone in the upper arm. It is primarily used in orthopedic medicine and physical therapy to describe areas of concern during surgery, injury assessment, or prosthetic fitting.

microfluship

C1

A precise, automated release of a minimal amount of fluid or data used to clear a micro-system or reset high-sensitivity sensors. It is typically employed in microfluidic engineering and advanced computing to prevent sediment buildup or signal noise.

antiponness

C1

The quality or state of being opposed to or averse to hard labor, toil, or physical exertion. It describes a deep-seated resistance to performing arduous tasks, often found in philosophical or psychological discussions about the nature of work.

forenumerary

C1

Describes something that pertains to an initial or preliminary counting or listing that occurs before the main enumeration. It is typically used in administrative, historical, or technical contexts to refer to items or individuals recorded ahead of a final official tally.

detangite

C1

To separate components, strands, or ideas that have become intricately intertwined or knotted. It is most frequently used in formal or technical contexts to describe the process of unravelling a complex situation, data set, or physical structure.

unitangine

C1

Describing a process or system that operates through a single point of contact or a singular, unbranching focus. It is often used in technical or analytical contexts to denote a direct and isolated interaction between two entities.

enjectment

C1

Ejectment is a legal action or remedy brought by a person who claims title to real property to recover possession of that property. It is primarily used to remove a tenant or squatter who is wrongfully occupying the land and to settle disputes regarding the rightful owner's title.

invertite

C1

Describing something that has been reversed in position, order, or nature, or turned upside down. It is a highly specialized or archaic term used primarily in technical, historical, or biological contexts to denote a state of inversion.

malteghood

C1

Describing a state marked by deep-seated communal loyalty and historical resilience. It refers to qualities or behaviors that prioritize the preservation of a group's collective identity and shared fortitude above individual interests.

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