- confirm **** con·firm vt
- [kən'fɜːm]
(gen) confermare, (strengthen: belief) rafforzare, Rel cresimare
English-Italian dictionary. 2013.
English-Italian dictionary. 2013.
con|firm´er — con|firm «kuhn FURM», transitive verb. 1. to prove to be true or correct; make certain: »The rumor that there was flooding was confirmed by a news broadcast. 2. to make more certain by putting in writing, by consent, or by encouragement: »He sent … Useful english dictionary
con|firm´a|ble — con|firm «kuhn FURM», transitive verb. 1. to prove to be true or correct; make certain: »The rumor that there was flooding was confirmed by a news broadcast. 2. to make more certain by putting in writing, by consent, or by encouragement: »He sent … Useful english dictionary
con|firm — «kuhn FURM», transitive verb. 1. to prove to be true or correct; make certain: »The rumor that there was flooding was confirmed by a news broadcast. 2. to make more certain by putting in writing, by consent, or by encouragement: »He sent the… … Useful english dictionary
con|firm|a|to|ry — «kuhn FUR muh TR ee, TOHR », adjective. serving to confirm; confirming: »confirmatory experiments … Useful english dictionary
dis|con|firm — «DIHS kuhn FURM», transitive verb. to refuse to confirm; reject; invalidate; disprove: »to disconfirm an order, a theory, etc … Useful english dictionary
re|con|firm — «REE kuhn FURM», transitive verb. to confirm anew: »to reconfirm a reservation … Useful english dictionary
Confirm — Con*firm , v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Confrmed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Confirming}.] [OE. confermen, confirmen, OF. confermer, F. confirmer, fr. L. confirmare; con + firmare to make firm, fr. firmus firm. See {Firm}.] 1. To make firm or firmer; to add… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
confirm — con·firm vt 1 a: to make valid by necessary formal approval the debtor s chapter 13 plan confirm ed by the court b: to vote approval of confirm a nomination 2: to give formal acknowledgment of receipt of 3 … Law dictionary
confirm — con‧firm [kənˈfɜːm ǁ fɜːrm] verb [transitive] 1. to say or show that something is definitely true: • The company said the report confirmed what its own directors and accountants had already established. confirm that • Walsh confirmed that the… … Financial and business terms
confirm — con•firm [[t]kənˈfɜrm[/t]] v. t. 1) to establish the truth, accuracy, validity, or genuineness of; corroborate; verify: to confirm one s suspicions[/ex] 2) to acknowledge with definite assurance; make certain or definite: to confirm a… … From formal English to slang
confirm — con|firm W2S2 [kənˈfə:m US ə:rm] v [T] [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: confirmer, from Latin confirmare, from com ( COM ) + firmare to make firm ] 1.) to show that something is definitely true, especially by providing more proof ▪ New… … Dictionary of contemporary English