释义 |
certitudecer‧ti‧tude /ˈsɜːtɪtjuːd $ ˈsɜːrtɪtuːd/ noun [uncountable] certitudeOrigin: 1400-1500 Late Latin certitudo, from Latin certus; ➔ CERTAIN1 - And over the years those increments of certitude had made me the perfect foreigner.
- Both lack a set identity, living without a certitude of their place in relation to their surrounding society.
- But self-confidence in the sense of psychological certitude is not the same things as absolute certainty in the philosophical sense.
- It would be vital, as he knew, for the next few exchanges to be transcribed with unimpeachable certitude.
- Legalities aside, the loss of any certitude that real communication has transpired represents a cost-deficient nightmare.
- The likelihood that this will frequently be true can not be mistaken for the certitude that it is always so.
- The thing was shown with mystifying certitude.
- This was how we perceived our situation, and the Gulf War turned our perception into certitude.
formal the state of being or feeling certain about something SYN certainty |