English
Etymology
From Middle English feithful, equivalent to faith + -ful.
Pronunciation
Adjective
faithful (comparative more faithful, superlative most faithful)
- Loyal; adhering firmly to person or cause.
My dog is very faithful: he doesn't like to be petted by anybody else.
- Having faith.
2009, Paul Lakeland, Church: Living Communion, page 162:The application of the old discipline, say the conservatives, would probably produce a smaller but more faithful Church.
- Reliable; worthy of trust.
My servant is very faithful.
- Consistent with reality.
I would consider that a very faithful reproduction.
- Engaging in sexual relations only with one's spouse or long-term sexual partner.
They had been faithful to each other all of their married life.
1976, The Missouri Breaks:She wanted to be free to explore casual affairs, but her man had to be faithful.
- (mathematics) Injective in specific contexts, e.g. of representations in representation or functors in category theory.
- (ring theory, of a module) Whose annihilator is zero.
Derived terms
Translations
loyal; adhering firmly to person or cause
- Albanian: besnik (sq)
- Arabic: وَفِيّ (wafiyy), مُخْلِص (muḵliṣ)
- Armenian: հավատարիմ (hy) (havatarim)
- Azerbaijani: sadiq (az), sədaqətli (az), vəfalı (az)
- Bashkir: тоғро (toğro)
- Belarusian: ве́рны (vjérny)
- Bengali: বিশ্বস্ত (bn) (biśśosto), অনুগত (bn) (onugoto)
- Bulgarian: ве́рен (bg) (véren), пре́дан (bg) (prédan)
- Burmese: သစ္စာရှိ (my) (saccahri.)
- Catalan: fidel (ca), lleial (ca)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 忠實 / 忠实 (zh) (zhōngshí)
- Czech: věrný (cs) m
- Danish: trofast
- Dutch: getrouw (nl)
- Esperanto: fidela (eo)
- Estonian: ustav, truu
- Finnish: uskollinen (fi)
- French: fidèle (fr), loyal (fr)
- Friulian: fidêl
- Galician: fiel (gl), leal (gl)
- Georgian: ერთგული (ertguli)
- German: treu (de), loyal (de), anhänglich (de), treu ergeben, zuverlässig (de), getreu (de)
- Gothic: 𐍄𐍂𐌹𐌲𐌲𐍅𐍃 (triggws)
- Greek: πιστός (el) (pistós)
- Ancient: πιστός (pistós)
- Hebrew: נֶאֱמָן (he) (ne'emán)
- Hindi: निष्ठावान (niṣṭhāvān), वफ़ादार (vafādār)
- Hungarian: hű (hu), hűséges (hu)
- Icelandic: trúr (is), tryggur (is)
- Ido: fidela (io)
- Indonesian: setia (id)
- Ingrian: vernoi
- Italian: fedele (it), ligio (it) m
- Japanese: 忠実な (ja) (ちゅうじつな, chūjitsu na)
- Kazakh: адал (adal)
- Khmer: ចិត្តត្រង់ (cət trɑng)
- Korean: 충실하다 (ko) (chungsilhada)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: wefadar (ku), dilsoz (ku)
- Kyrgyz: ишенимдүү (ky) (işenimdüü), динге ишенген (ky) (dinge işengen), чынчыл (ky) (cıncıl), ишенчиликтүү (ky) (işenciliktüü), так (ky) (tak)
- Ladin: fedel
- Lao: ຊື່ (sư̄), ຊື່ຕົງ (sư̄ tong)
- Latgalian: teirserdeigs
- Latin: firmus, fidēlis m or f, fidus
- Latvian: godprātīgs, uzticīgs
- Lithuanian: ištikimas
- Low German:
- German Low German: tro
- Macedonian: верен (veren)
- Malay: setia (ms)
- Maori: pirihonga, piripono
- Mongolian:
- Cyrillic: үнэнч (mn) (ünenč)
- Mongolian: ᠦᠨᠡᠨᠴᠢ (ünenči)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: trofast (no)
- Nynorsk: trufast
- Old English: trīewe, ġetrīewe
- Pashto: وفادار (wafādãr)
- Persian: وفادار (fa) (vafâdâr)
- Polish: wierny (pl)
- Portuguese: fiel (pt), leal (pt)
- Romagnol: fidél
- Romanian: fidel (ro), loial (ro)
- Russian: ве́рный (ru) (vérnyj), пре́данный (ru) (prédannyj)
- Sanskrit: निष्ठावान् (niṣṭhāvān), भक्त (sa) (bhakta)
- Sardinian: fidele, fideli, fieli
- Scottish Gaelic: dìleas
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: веран, вјеран
- Roman: veran (sh), vjeran (sh)
- Sicilian: fideli
- Slovak: verný (sk)
- Slovene: zvest (sl)
- Spanish: fiel (es), leal (es)
- Swedish: trogen (sv)
- Tajik: вафодор (vafodor)
- Telugu: నమ్మకమైన (te) (nammakamaina)
- Thai: ซื่อสัตย์ (th) (sʉ̂ʉ-sàt), จงรัก (th) (jong-rák), ซื่อตรง (th) (sʉ̂ʉ-dtrong), ซื่อ (th) (sʉ̂ʉ)
- Turkish: sadakatli (tr), sadık (tr), vefakar, vefakâr (tr), vefalı (tr)
- Turkmen: wepaly
- Ukrainian: ві́рний (vírnyj), ві́дданий (víddanyj)
- Urdu: وفادار (vafādār)
- Uyghur: سادىق (sadiq), ۋاپادار (wapadar)
- Uzbek: sodiq (uz), vafodor (uz)
- Vietnamese: chung thủy (vi)
- Welsh: fyddlon
- Yiddish: טרײַ (tray), געטרײַ (getray)
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reliable; worthy of trust
- Arabic: أَمِين (ar) (ʔamīn)
- Catalan: fidel (ca)
- Danish: pålidelig
- Dutch: trouw (nl)
- Finnish: luotettava (fi)
- French: fidèle (fr)
- Galician: leal (gl), fiel (gl)
- German: treu (de), zuverlässig (de), ergeben (de), vertrauensvoll (de), vertrauenswürdig (de)
- Greek:
- Ancient: πιστός (pistós)
- Italian: affidabile (it)
- Latin: fidēlis, fidus
- Norwegian: troverdig (no)
- Bokmål: etterrettelig, trofast (no)
- Nynorsk: trufast
- Plautdietsch: tru
- Portuguese: fiel (pt), leal (pt), confiável (pt)
- Russian: надёжный (ru) (nadjóžnyj), заслу́живающий дове́рия (zaslúživajuščij dovérija)
- Swahili: -aminifu
- Turkish: güvenilir (tr)
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consistent with reality
- Bulgarian: правдив (bg) (pravdiv), достоверен (bg) (dostoveren)
- Catalan: fidel (ca)
- Czech: věrný (cs) m
- Danish: nøjagtig, tro (da)
- Finnish: uskollinen (fi)
- German: genau (de), übereinstimmend (de), gewissenhaft (de), getreu (de), werktreu, sinngetreu, orginalgetreu, detailgetreu (de), klangtreu, naturgetreu (de), wahrheitsgetreu (de), glaubwürdig (de)
- Norwegian: tro (no)
- Portuguese: fiel (pt), verossímil (pt)
- Russian: ве́рный (ru) (vérnyj), то́чный (ru) (tóčnyj)
- Turkish: sadık (tr), gerçekçi (tr)
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
- Georgian: (please verify) ერთგული (ertguli)
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See also
Noun
faithful (plural faithfuls)
- (in the plural) The practicing members of a religion or followers of a cause.
The faithful pray five times a day.
- Someone or something that is faithful or reliable.
2009 September 30, Bruce DeMara, “Shaw's comedy gets teeth”, in Toronto Star[2]:Earlier this year, as the recession put a damper on ticket sales, Maxwell said the easy route would have been to go for the tried-and-true old faithfuls.
Further reading