Confirm /(?)/
Con·firm
Confirm
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Confrmed; p. pr. & vb. n. Confirming
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To make firm or firmer; to add strength to; to establish; as, health is confirmed by exercise.
Confirm the crown to me and to mine heirs.
And confirmed the same unto Jacob for a law.
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To strengthen in judgment or purpose.
Confirmed, then, I resolve Adam shall share with me in bliss or woe.
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To give new assurance of the truth of; to render certain; to verify; to corroborate; as, to confirm a rumor.
Your eyes shall witness and confirm my tale.
These likelihoods confirm her flight.
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To render valid by formal assent; to complete by a necessary sanction; to ratify; as, to confirm the appoinment of an official; the Senate confirms a treaty.
That treaty so prejudicial ought to have been remitted rather than confimed.
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To administer the rite of confirmation to. See Confirmation, 3. (Eccl.)
Those which are thus confirmed are thereby supposed to be fit for admission to the sacrament.