intentionally-confirmed
|in-ten-tion-al-ly-con-fir-med|
🇺🇸
/ɪnˈtɛnʃənəli kənˈfɜrmd/
🇬🇧
/ɪnˈtɛnʃənəli kənˈfɜːmd/
deliberately verified
Etymology
'intentionally-confirmed' originates from the combination of 'intentionally' and 'confirmed'. 'Intentionally' comes from the Latin word 'intentio', meaning 'a stretching out', and 'confirmed' comes from the Latin word 'confirmare', meaning 'to strengthen' or 'to establish'.
'intentionally' evolved from the Latin 'intentio' through Old French 'intencion', and 'confirmed' evolved from the Latin 'confirmare' through Old French 'confirmer'.
Initially, 'intentionally' meant 'with intention or purpose', and 'confirmed' meant 'to make firm or establish'. The combined term 'intentionally-confirmed' retains these meanings in modern usage.
Meanings by Part of Speech
Adjective 1
deliberately verified or validated.
The results were intentionally-confirmed to ensure accuracy.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Last updated: 2025/04/24 23:57
