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Christine Christie Posted 5 years ago
Grammar

Trust

Do both these sentence mean the same (and if not, what's the difference between both):


a) "He's not trustful."


b) "He's not trusty."

  

Top answer

" Those are nice tries, but the word is "trustworthy". He's not trustworthy. ) Less used: trusty: usually applied to something that you can always rely on After saving the damsel in distress, the knight rode off on his trusty steed.

  • " Those are nice tries, but the word is "trustworthy".
  • He's not trustworthy.
  • ) Less used: trusty: usually applied to something that you can always rely on After saving the damsel in distress, the knight rode off on his trusty steed.
  • In those days cowboys wore their trusty six-shooters on their hips.
  • What would Robin Hood be without his trusty bow and arrow?
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1 Answers
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Christine Christie

Do both these sentence mean the same (and if not, what's the difference between both):


a) "He's not trustful."


b) "He's not trusty."

Those are nice tries, but the word is "trustworthy".

He's not trustworthy. (You can't trust him.)

Less used:

trusty: usually applied to som

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