[
UK
/tɹˈʌstfəl/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
inclined to believe or confide readily; full of trust
great brown eye, true and trustful
How To Use trustful In A Sentence
- Having made a personal visit to the centre, I believe this initiative will further strengthen more trustful relations within the community - and hopefully will provide a good deal of fun along the way.
- Some of his best mates are journalists, but generally he is sceptical and distrustful of the media and never saw his role as a background briefer to reporters.
- Naturally trustful people must never be given a good reason to become cynical, for cynicism is the enemy of every honor system.
- Too distrustful to delegate his responsibility to his ministers, he was too infirm of will to strike out and follow a consistent course for himself.
- The horses slithered down the shallow bank and onto the glassy surface at a rapid trot, but the black was mistrustful of the insecure footing and jibbed skittishly.
- his mouth grinned trustfully
- Contemporary accounts give the impression of a watchful, mistrustful regime, of a country bristling with fortresses and teeming with soldiers.
- The latter and the Imperial Russian Musical Society were distrustful of the group of musicians known as the ‘Handful of Five’.
- First and foremost, for a group to be successful in its combined efforts, everyone should be comfortable and trustful with others in the group.
- Feeling uncomfortable about technologies that promise to make us more attractive seems a little silly, but I am mistrustful of the version of the good life that seems to be proposed by plastic surgery.