Confide Sentence Examples

confide
  • Do you confide in her?

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  • I guess we have to trust him, but I wish he'd stop going solo and confide in us.

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  • Felipa slowly shook her head, obviously contemplating whether it was wise to confide in them.

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  • Khalid, and to confide important posts to the two sons of Yahya, Faell and Ja`far, of whom the former was his own foster-brother, the latter his intimate friend.

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  • She paused, as if hesitating to confide, until her anger overcame her reticence.

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  • Dean hadn't planned to confide all his concerns to Lydia— frankly, he wasn't sure he could trust her enough.

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  • It was natural, therefore, that he should be one of the four persons (the others being Mr. Lloyd George himself, Sir Edward Carson, and a Labour member) to whom Mr. Lloyd George, forcing the issue on Dec. I, asked Mr. Asquith to confide the absolute conduct of the war.

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  • In Moscow Princess Mary had no one to talk to, no one to whom to confide her sorrow, and much sorrow fell to her lot just then.

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  • I'm pleased Martha trusted us enough to confide in us, even though now I have to take my hat in my hand and talk Jake Weller into spelunking after a skeleton.

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  • You can either confide in a close friend or write out your anxieties.

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  • It was bold policy to confide Frederick to his greatest enemy and rival; but the pope honorably discharged his duty, until his ward outgrew the years of tutelage, and became a fair mark for ecclesiastical hostility.

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  • It was clear she'd overheard a lot of information and as I was fearful she might confide in someone else, I admitted to her that Howie was the person the world was seeking, the so-called psychic tipster.

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  • It may be tempting to confide in your children, but resist the urge to do this.

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  • However, I did not confide in them the factors bearing on me to produce that decision.

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  • Children are less likely to confide in a parent who reacts with anger instead of understanding.

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  • Your boyfriend or girlfriend is more likely to confide in you if you demonstrate that you can listen.

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  • If at any time you feel out of control of your emotions or find yourself entertaining thoughts of self-harm, contact a professional counselor, call a depression hotline, or confide in a trusted friend.

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  • Since some teenagers don't have another trusted adult they can confide in, they often turn to their peers.

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  • Many adolescents suffer through depression unnoticed because either they do not want to confide in an adult or the adult they do tell thinks they are overreacting or seeking attention.

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  • Also, what do you think about having friends of the opposite sex to whom you confide personal issues?

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  • By using you as his personal therapist, he is then free to confide in you about his pain over his breakup.

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  • The obvious remedy for these evils was to concentrate the executive power, to render the petty chiefs amenable to one tribunal, and to confide the management of the defensive force to one hand.

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  • He clenched his hands in his lap and shook his head, the way Jonny did when he refused to confide in her.

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  • Dean hadn't planned to confide all his concerns to Lydia— frankly, he wasn't sure he could trust her enough.

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  • You may not want to talk to your guy friends about your feelings because they may not know what to say or do, but if you have a female friend that you can trust, it's a good idea to confide in her.

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  • It’s highly helpful for an empath to have a confidant she can confide in and never worry about being judged.

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  • What if you was gay and needed someone to confide in.

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  • You child will confide in the doll as well as practice important social skills as she grows and develops.

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  • Only eight months before, Catherine had haughtily declared that "the odious and revolting aggression" of the king of Sweden would be "forgiven" only if he "testified his repentance" by agreeing to a peace granting a general and unlimited amnesty to all his rebels, and consenting to a guarantee by the Swedish diet ("as it would be imprudent to confide in his good faith alone") for the observance of peace in the future.

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