commit may express the general idea of delivering into another's charge or the special sense of transferring to a superior power or to a special place of custody.
committed the felon to prison
entrust implies committing with trust and confidence.
the president is entrusted with broad powers
confide implies entrusting with great assurance or reliance.
confided complete control of my affairs to my attorney
consign suggests removing from one's control with formality or finality.
consigned the damaging notes to the fire
relegate implies a consigning to a particular class or sphere often with a suggestion of getting rid of.
relegated to an obscure position in the company
Example Sentences
He confided that he was very unhappy with his job. the local SPCA was looking for homes for a number of exotic animals confided to its care
Recent Examples on the WebStudents confide in him about the violence that touches their lives, the deacon told the Tribune. Jake Sheridan, Chicago Tribune, 11 Aug. 2022 Despite being blunt about everything else in her life, Jones did not confide the truth about her mental state to audiences or to her View co-hosts. Dave Quinn, PEOPLE.com, 2 June 2022 And men are less likely to have women confide in them about their abortions.Glamour, 13 May 2022 Those who set their dating app location to Ukraine have used the app to donate funds, provide housing to refugees, and serve as someone Ukrainians can confide in during this challenging time. Amanda Florian, ELLE, 11 May 2022 Sister Catherine Cesnik of the Archbishop Keough High School in Baltimore is someone students often confide in. Sophie Hanson, Harper's BAZAAR, 6 May 2022 The desire to confide, to be seen, is a universal human one; personal narrative is a way of reaping art from that desire.Los Angeles Times, 11 Mar. 2022 In the meantime Zhytelna, who speaks English as a third language, continues to confide and confess and cry with the teammate whose country is waging war on hers. Kevin Baxter, Los Angeles Times, 28 Feb. 2022 The Arizona bill has the potential to upend the common reality that a teacher is often a person students choose to confide in. Michael Smolens Columnist, San Diego Union-Tribune, 2 Feb. 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
early Scots, borrowed from Latin confīdere "to put trust in, have confidence in," from con-con- + fīdere "to trust (in), rely (on)" going back to Indo-European *bhei̯dh- "trust, entrust" — more at faith entry 1