good faith
English
Etymology
Calque of Anglo-Norman bone fei, Middle French bonne foy and Old French bonne foy, en bone fei (“loyally, with honesty, with sincere intention”) (modern French bonne foi (“good faith”), de bonne foi (“in good faith, in earnest”)), from Latin bona fidēs (“good faith”).[1]
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /ˌɡʊd ˈfeɪθ/
Noun
- Good, honest intentions, even if producing unfortunate results. [from between 1890 and 1895]
- He made a mistake, but acted in good faith.
- Although this behavior may look suspicious, we should assume good faith.
Antonyms
Translations
good, honest intentions
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Adjective
good faith (comparative more good faith, superlative most good faith)
- Having or done with good, honest intentions; well-intentioned.
- A good faith buyer.
- A good faith attempt.
- 2023 April 1, Jonathan Weisman, “Trump and Fox News, Twin Titans of Politics, Hit With Back-to-Back Rebukes”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:
- A day later, after years of arguing that Fox News was hardly fair and balanced, they could read a judge’s finding that Fox had not conducted “good-faith, disinterested reporting” on Dominion.
- Presuming that all parties to a discussion are honest and intend to act in a fair and appropriate manner.
- Good faith bargaining.
Alternative forms
- good-faith
Translations
References
- “good faith”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
Further reading
good faith on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
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