confidante
English
Etymology
From French confidente.
Noun
confidante (plural confidantes)
- A female confidant.
- 2019 May 5, Danette Chavez, “Campaigns are Waged On and Off the Game Of Thrones Battlefield (Newbies)”, in The A.V. Club, archived from the original on 28 January 2021:
- Dany’s descent into madness is coming, of that there’s no doubt, especially given that the episode ends with the execution of her confidante Missandei.
- A type of settee having a seat at each end at right angles to the main seats.
- 1982, TC Boyle, Water Music, Penguin, published 2006, page 20:
- Meanwhile, Sally peels herself from the stage's only prop – a green-velvet confidante – and staggers off into the wings.
- Nonstandard spelling of confidant (male).
- 1847, Harriette Smythies, A Warning to Lives: or, the Platonic Lover. A Novel, volume 1, page 107:
- To Major Smiley, as his friend, his adviser, and his confidante, Adolphus Fitzopal had opened his heart […]
- 1976, Paul Misner, Papacy and Development: Newman and the Primacy of the Pope, →ISBN, page 1:
- Henry Wilberforce was one of his few confidantes, certainly the one of longest standing, now that Bowden and Froude were gone and Rogers declined to correspond with him.
- 1994 [1989], Ignacio Larrañaga, translated by Jennie M. Ibarra, Brother Francis of Assisi, →ISBN, page 45:
- The fortunate confidante is lost in anonymity. He is a character who has always intrigued biographers […] [but] nothing is known about his name or his personal history.
Translations
female confidant
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Italian
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