B2 verb #3,000 الأكثر شيوعاً 3 دقيقة للقراءة

credible

Credible means that something is believable or trustworthy.

Explanation at your level:

If something is credible, it is true. You can believe it. If a friend tells you a story and you think it is real, the story is credible. If it sounds like a lie, it is not credible.

We use credible to talk about news or people. A credible person tells the truth. A credible report has good facts. It is a very useful word when you want to say that you trust information.

When you are doing research, you need credible sources. This means the information comes from a place that checks facts. If you hear a rumor, you might ask, 'Is that a credible source?' It helps you avoid believing fake news.

In formal writing or debates, credible is essential. Instead of saying 'I don't believe you,' you might say, 'Your argument lacks credible evidence.' It makes your point sound more professional and objective. It is often used with nouns like 'threat,' 'witness,' or 'alternative.'

The nuance of credible lies in its reliance on logic and evidence. It is not merely about whether something is true, but whether it is plausible enough to warrant our confidence. In academic discourse, a credible hypothesis is one that stands up to scrutiny. It distinguishes between mere opinion and substantiated fact, making it a cornerstone of critical thinking.

At the mastery level, credible intersects with the concept of 'epistemic authority.' We evaluate the credibility of institutions and individuals based on historical performance and logical consistency. It is a word that carries the weight of intellectual rigor. Whether discussing the credibility of a witness in a high-stakes trial or the credibility of a geopolitical analysis, the word implies a standard of proof that is universally recognized in professional and scholarly circles.

الكلمة في 30 ثانية

  • Credible means believable or trustworthy.
  • It comes from the Latin word for 'to believe'.
  • Commonly used to describe evidence, witnesses, and sources.
  • The noun form is 'credibility'.

When we call something credible, we are saying it passes the test of believability. Think of it as the 'truth-o-meter' for information. If a witness gives a credible account, it means their story is logical, consistent, and matches the facts we know.

It is a vital word in our modern world, especially when we are scrolling through news or social media. We constantly ask ourselves, 'Is this source credible?' By using this word, you are signaling that you value evidence over rumors. It is not just about being 'true'; it is about being worthy of our trust.

The word credible has a deep history rooted in Latin. It comes from the verb credere, which means 'to believe' or 'to trust.' This is the same root that gave us the word credit—because when you give someone credit, you are essentially saying you trust them to pay you back.

It entered Middle English in the 15th century, evolving from the Old French credible. Over time, it moved away from purely religious or financial contexts to become the standard way we describe the reliability of information, people, and arguments in everyday life.

You will hear credible most often in professional, legal, or academic settings. It is a high-register word that sounds much more precise than just saying 'believable.' Common pairings include credible threat, credible witness, and credible evidence.

While it is perfectly fine to use in casual conversation, it carries a sense of seriousness. If you are talking to a friend about a rumor, saying 'That doesn't sound credible' sounds a bit more intellectual and measured than saying 'That sounds fake.'

While credible itself isn't the star of many idioms, it is often used in phrases that relate to trust. For example: 'Beyond a shadow of a doubt' implies that evidence is so credible that no doubt remains. Another is 'Take it with a grain of salt', which is the exact opposite of finding something credible.

You might also hear 'Give someone the benefit of the doubt', which means we are choosing to treat someone as credible even if we aren't 100% sure. These expressions help us navigate how much we should trust the information coming our way.

Credible is an adjective. It does not have a plural form. To make it negative, we add the prefix 'in-' to get incredible—though note that incredible has shifted in meaning to also mean 'amazing.' For the true negative, use incredible (in the literal sense) or unbelievable.

Pronunciation: In the UK, it is ˈkred.ə.bəl. In the US, it is ˈkred.ə.bəl. The stress is on the first syllable. It rhymes with edible, legible, and audible, which all share that '-ible' suffix denoting capability.

Fun Fact

It shares a root with 'creed', which is a set of beliefs.

Pronunciation Guide

UK ˈkred.ə.bəl

KRED-uh-bull

US ˈkred.ə.bəl

KRED-uh-bull

Common Errors

  • Mispronouncing the 'd' as 't'
  • Stressing the second syllable
  • Dropping the 'b' sound

Rhymes With

edible legible audible tangible flexible

Difficulty Rating

القراءة 2/5

Common in news

Writing 2/5

Useful for formal essays

Speaking 3/5

Sounds professional

الاستماع 2/5

Common in debates

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

true real trust

Learn Next

plausible skeptical verify

متقدم

epistemic substantiated

Grammar to Know

Adjective placement

The credible report.

Prefixes

In- + credible.

Linking verbs

It seems credible.

Examples by Level

1

The story is credible.

The story / is / believable.

Subject + verb + adjective.

2

Is he credible?

Can I / trust / him?

Question form.

3

That is not credible.

That / is / not / true.

Negative form.

4

I need a credible reason.

I need / a / good / reason.

Adjective before noun.

5

Her report is credible.

Her / report / is / real.

Possessive adjective.

6

They are credible people.

They / are / honest / people.

Plural subject.

7

It sounds credible.

It / sounds / believable.

Linking verb.

8

Find a credible source.

Find / a / good / source.

Imperative.

1

The police found a credible witness.

2

Her excuse was not very credible.

3

We need credible evidence to win.

4

Is this website credible?

5

The theory seems credible to me.

6

He gave a credible explanation.

7

That is a credible threat.

8

They are a credible organization.

1

The scientist presented a credible argument.

2

I don't think his story is entirely credible.

3

We must rely on credible information only.

4

The company has a credible plan for growth.

5

She is a highly credible expert in her field.

6

There is no credible proof for that claim.

7

The witness was deemed credible by the jury.

8

It is a credible alternative to the current system.

1

The report lacks a credible foundation.

2

Critics questioned the credibility of the data.

3

He made a credible attempt to solve the problem.

4

The government faces a credible threat of protest.

5

We need to establish a credible timeline.

6

Her testimony was the most credible one heard.

7

There is a credible risk of failure.

8

The candidate failed to provide a credible vision.

1

The journalist maintained a credible distance from the subject.

2

His defense was based on a credible interpretation of the law.

3

The findings lack the credible backing of peer review.

4

She offered a credible rebuttal to the accusations.

5

The strategy requires a credible commitment from all parties.

6

It is a credible assertion, though hard to verify.

7

The narrative is credible despite the unusual circumstances.

8

We must ensure the process remains credible.

1

The author’s credibility is undermined by his lack of sources.

2

His testimony provided a credible account of the events.

3

The institution has lost its credibility in the eyes of the public.

4

A credible threat to the ecosystem was identified.

5

The evidence is not credible enough to convict.

6

She is a credible voice in the debate on climate change.

7

The theory is credible within the framework of modern physics.

8

They are working to restore the credibility of the brand.

المرادفات

believable trustworthy reliable plausible dependable convincing

الأضداد

تلازمات شائعة

credible evidence
credible witness
credible threat
credible source
credible explanation
highly credible
credible alternative
credible claim
credible plan
credible account

Idioms & Expressions

"beyond a shadow of a doubt"

completely certain

The evidence is credible beyond a shadow of a doubt.

formal

"take with a grain of salt"

to be skeptical

Take his story with a grain of salt; it isn't credible.

casual

"the benefit of the doubt"

trusting someone despite uncertainty

I gave him the benefit of the doubt.

neutral

"straight from the horse's mouth"

from a credible source

I heard it from the horse's mouth.

casual

"hold water"

to be logical/credible

His argument doesn't hold water.

neutral

Easily Confused

credible vs Credulous

Similar sound

Credulous means gullible; credible means believable.

A credulous person believes everything; a credible story is worth believing.

credible vs Incredible

Opposite prefix

Incredible means amazing or unbelievable.

The story was credible, but the performance was incredible.

credible vs Credit

Same root

Credit is a noun/verb; credible is an adjective.

He deserves credit for his credible work.

credible vs Plausible

Similar meaning

Plausible means logical; credible means trustworthy.

It is plausible, but is it credible?

Sentence Patterns

A1

Subject + is + credible

The report is credible.

B1

Subject + provides + credible + evidence

He provides credible evidence.

B2

It is + credible + to + verb

It is credible to assume this.

C1

Subject + remains + credible

The witness remains credible.

C2

Despite + noun, + subject + is + credible

Despite the rumors, he is credible.

عائلة الكلمة

Nouns

credibility the quality of being trusted

Verbs

credit to believe or attribute

Adjectives

incredible impossible to believe/amazing

مرتبط

credo a statement of belief

How to Use It

frequency

7

Formality Scale

Academic/Legal Professional Neutral Casual

أخطاء شائعة

Using 'incredible' to mean 'credible'. Use 'credible'.
Incredible now usually means 'amazing'.
Confusing 'credulous' with 'credible'. Credulous means gullible.
Credulous is the person; credible is the thing.
Using 'credibility' as an adjective. Use 'credible'.
Credibility is a noun.
Saying 'very incredible'. Say 'highly credible'.
Redundant/wrong usage.
Misspelling as 'credable'. Credible.
Spelling rule -ible.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace

Visualize a bank (credit) where the teller is the only one you trust (credible).

💡

Professional Edge

Use 'credible' instead of 'good' when discussing arguments.

🌍

Media Literacy

Use this word when discussing fake news.

💡

Suffix Rule

-ible usually means 'capable of'.

💡

Clear Speech

Don't swallow the 'd' sounds.

💡

Incredible Trap

Remember that 'incredible' is usually a compliment now.

💡

Root Word

It shares a root with 'creed' (a belief system).

💡

Flashcards

Pair 'credible' with 'evidence' and 'source'.

💡

Legal Context

In court, a 'credible witness' is everything.

💡

Noun vs Adjective

Credible (adj) vs Credibility (noun).

Memorize It

Mnemonic

CRED-ible: You give them CREDIT because they are believable.

Visual Association

A judge nodding at a witness who is speaking clearly.

Word Web

Trust Evidence Truth Facts Belief

تحدٍّ

Find one news article today and check if the source is credible.

أصل الكلمة

Latin

Original meaning: To believe

السياق الثقافي

None

Used heavily in legal and journalistic contexts.

Credibility Gap (political term)

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Journalism

  • credible source
  • credible report
  • credible claim

Law

  • credible witness
  • credible testimony
  • credible evidence

Business

  • credible plan
  • credible strategy
  • credible growth

Academic

  • credible argument
  • credible research
  • credible hypothesis

Conversation Starters

"What makes a news source credible to you?"

"Can you think of a time someone told you an incredible story?"

"Why is it important to have credible witnesses in court?"

"Do you think social media makes it harder to find credible information?"

"How can a company build a credible reputation?"

Journal Prompts

Write about a time you had to decide if information was credible.

Describe a person you know who is very credible.

Why do you think people believe things that are not credible?

How do you check if a website is credible?

الأسئلة الشائعة

8 أسئلة

Not exactly; it means it is *believable* based on evidence.

Yes, a credible person is someone who is honest and reliable.

Incredible or implausible.

It is more formal than 'believable'.

Subject + is + credible.

Yes, both come from the Latin 'credere' (to believe).

Usually for information, reports, or plans.

Yes, especially in professional writing.

اختبر نفسك

fill blank A1

The story is ___.

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: credible

Credible means believable.

multiple choice A2

Which means believable?

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: credible

Credible is the definition of believable.

true false B1

A credible source is one you can trust.

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: صحيح

Credible means worthy of trust.

match pairs B1

Word

المعنى

All matched!

They are synonyms.

sentence order B2

انقر على الكلمات أدناه لبناء الجملة
صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة:

This is not credible.

fill blank B2

We need ___ evidence.

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: credible

Evidence is usually described as credible.

true false C1

Credible and incredible mean the same thing.

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: خطأ

Incredible often means amazing.

multiple choice C1

What is the noun form?

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: credibility

Credibility is the noun.

sentence order C2

انقر على الكلمات أدناه لبناء الجملة
صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة:

The witness is credible.

fill blank C2

The argument lacks ___.

صحيح! ليس تمامًا. الإجابة الصحيحة: credibility

Needs a noun.

النتيجة: /10

Related Content

هذه الكلمة بلغات أخرى

مزيد من كلمات Communication

aah

A1

هي كلمة تعبر عن الارتياح أو الرضا أو السعادة. أحياناً تستخدم للتعبير عن الألم أو المفاجأة.

accentuate

C1

To make a particular feature of something more noticeable or prominent. It is frequently used to describe how one thing emphasizes the beauty, importance, or intensity of another.

acknowledgment

B2

An acknowledgment is the act of accepting or admitting that something is true, or a formal statement confirming that something has been received. It can also refer to a public expression of thanks for someone's help or contribution.

actually

B1

Actually is used to emphasize that something is a real fact or the truth, often contrasting with what was thought or said. It can also be used to introduce a surprising piece of information or to gently correct someone.

address

A2

التحدث إلى شخص ما مباشرة أو التعامل مع مشكلة معينة. كما يستخدم عند إلقاء خطاب أو كتابة عنوان على رسالة.

addressee

B2

The person or organization to whom a letter, package, or message is addressed. It refers to the intended recipient of a piece of communication.

adlocment

C1

Describes a style of communication or behavior that is formal, directed, and oratorical in nature, specifically pertaining to a public address or a declamatory speech. It is used to characterize language that is intentionally designed to be heard by an audience for the purpose of instruction or inspiration.

adloctude

C1

أسلوب تواصل رسمي ومباشر، يجمع بين القدرة على الوصول للآخرين والاحتفاظ بهيبة وشخصية قيادية.

admonish

C1

To firmly warn or reprimand someone for their behavior, or to advise someone earnestly to do or avoid something. It often implies a sense of moral guidance or authoritative concern rather than just anger.

adpassant

C1

To mention or address a secondary topic briefly and incidentally while focused on a primary task or discussion. It describes an action that occurs seamlessly 'in passing' without disrupting the main narrative or workflow.

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