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Desireandlove Posted 18 years ago
Grammar

A word I am unsure about

In faith for Liverpool, They should not sell him. Does it faith mean trust?
  

Top answer

The sentence seems odd and old-fashioned, but I presume that 'in faith for' = 'in order to keep faith with' = in loyalty to .

  • The sentence seems odd and old-fashioned, but I presume that 'in faith for' = 'in order to keep faith with' = in loyalty to .
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3 Answers
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The sentence seems odd and old-fashioned, but I presume that 'in faith for' = 'in order to keep faith with' = in loyalty to.
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I've never heard this expression. There is a football club of a sort in Liverpool and I think this might be referring to it. I think it probably means 'to keep faith with' or 'out of loyalty to', both of which are much more standard expressions, in my view.
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Hi Thomas,
A belated welcome to the Forum.

You mentioned that There is a football club of a sort in Liverpool.
I take it you're not a fan of them, then?

Liverpool Football Club are an English professional association footba

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