Archaisms are obsolete and obsolete words that are almost impossible to hear in everyday speech. Nevertheless, they can often be found in proverbs and sayings, literary works, old films, theater productions. One of those words is "trust". Let us consider in more detail what the word "trust" means, and the meaning of phrases with its use. Not everyone knows this.
Meaning of the word "trust"
According to Dahl's explanatory dictionary, this concept is defined as having firm faith in someone or something. This term is equivalent to such words as "rely", "hope", "count". That is, the meaning implies that only some external factor (higher powers, an outsider, a fluke), completely independent of a person, can influence the situation. Thus, at the heart of the meaning of the word "trust"lies not in efforts or knowledge and calculations, but in simple hope and faith in a miracle.
Examples of usage
Perhaps the most famous and illustrative example of the use of the word "hope" in the meaning of "believe, hope" is the Russian saying: "Trust in God, but don't make a mistake yourself." Its first part in its initial meaning sounded like: "Trust in God".
There are other examples worth considering. Also, the word "trust" in the sense of "relying on someone" or "completely trusting someone" can be found in works of art. For example: the film "I trust in you" (1992), "In you, mother, in you, my dear, I trust in you!" ("12 chairs", I. Ilf and E. Petrov), "Jesus, I trust in You" (an icon of the Roman Catholic Church, the second name is "The Image of the Merciful Jesus").
This term, in its original meaning, has gone out of colloquial speech, and today the meaning of the word "trust" has acquired an ironic connotation. It is used to emphasize the hopelessness of a situation. For example: "The attacking game went completely wrong, and it remained to rely on zeal and luck."
Also, in some cases, such a word is used to define a person as a freeloader sitting on someone's neck. For example: "He lived, trusting in his father."