Confess Definition

kən-fĕs
confessed, confesses
verb
confessed, confesses
To admit (a fault or crime)
Webster's New World
To disclose (something damaging or inconvenient to oneself); admit.
American Heritage
To acknowledge (an opinion or view)
Webster's New World
To take part in public confession or make one's confession to a priest.
Webster's New World
To admit a fault or crime; acknowledge one's guilt.
Webster's New World
Synonyms:
idiom
confess to
  • to admit or admit having; acknowledge
Webster's New World
stand confessed as
  • to be revealed or admitted as
Webster's New World

Idioms, Phrasal Verbs Related to Confess

  • confess to
  • stand confessed as

Origin of Confess

  • From Middle English confessen, from Anglo-Norman confesser, from Old French confesser, from Medieval Latin confessō (“I confess”), a derivative of Latin confessus (Old French confés), past participle of cōnfiteor (“I confess, I admit”) from con- + fateor (“I admit”). Displaced Middle English andetten (“to confess, admit”) (from Old English andettan).

    From Wiktionary

  • Middle English confessen from Old French confesser from Vulgar Latin cōnfessāre from Latin cōnfitērī cōnfess- com- intensive pref. com– fatērī to admit bhā-2 in Indo-European roots

    From American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition

Find Similar Words

Find similar words to confess using the buttons below.

Words Starting With

Words Ending With

Unscrambles

confess