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Believe   /bɪlˈiv/   Listen
Believe

verb
(past & past part. believed; pres. part. believing)
1.
Accept as true; take to be true.  "We didn't believe his stories from the War" , "She believes in spirits"
2.
Judge or regard; look upon; judge.  Synonyms: conceive, consider, think.  "I believe her to be very smart" , "I think that he is her boyfriend" , "The racist conceives such people to be inferior"
3.
Be confident about something.  Synonym: trust.
4.
Follow a credo; have a faith; be a believer.
5.
Credit with veracity.  "Should we believe a publication like the National Enquirer?"



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"Believe" Quotes from Famous Books



... money that went to adorn the pretty butterfly. She gave her at the same time the best of advice, and imagined she listened to it; but the young who take advice are almost beyond the need of it. Fools must experience a thing themselves before they will believe it; and then, remaining fools, they wonder that their children will not heed their testimony. Faith is the only charm by which the experience of one becomes a vantage-ground for ...
— Heather and Snow • George MacDonald

... exhibited at the Crystal Palace a collection of ancient European weapons and implements placed alongside a similar collection of articles brought from the South Seas; and they were in most respects so much alike that it was difficult to believe that they did not belong to the same race and period, instead of being the implements of races sundered by half the globe, and living at periods more than two thousand years apart. Nearly every weapon in the one collection had its counterpart in the other,—the mauls or celts of ...
— Industrial Biography - Iron Workers and Tool Makers • Samuel Smiles

... political concern. An educated and intelligent people living under a government of written law of their own making cannot but know how vital it is that this law should be fully guarded and fairly administered. Americans have become distrustful of their legislatures. They believe that much of their work is ill-considered, and that some of it has its source in corruption. They are far removed from the chief executive magistrates, and from the sphere in which they move. The President ...
— The American Judiciary • Simeon E. Baldwin, LLD

... That's only an old false theory, that exploded years ago, along with the one about everlasting damnation, and several other abominable ones of like ilk. Do you honestly believe—if you will think sanely for a moment—that you have had more joy than I? Or that you are not suffering twice as much as I am, ...
— The Old Gray Homestead • Frances Parkinson Keyes

... it shall be opened to ye' has perhaps a general as well as a special significance. It is by patient tireless seeking that many a precious thing has been found. It was after many a long cycle of thought that the seeking and the knocking had effectual result. Harold came to believe, vaguely at first but more definitely as the evidence nucleated, that Stephen's act was due to some mad girlish wish to test her own theory; to prove to herself the correctness of her own reasoning, the fixity of her own purpose. ...
— The Man • Bram Stoker


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