assurance
noun
- act/process of calming someone's nerves, assuaging, asserting positively, dispelling doubt, making (something) certain to happen, pledging
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /əˈʃɔːɹəns/ / /əˈʃʊəɹəns/ / /əˈʃʊɹəns/
noun
Etymology: From Middle English assuraunce, from Old French asseürance, from asseürer; as if assure + -ance.
- The act of assuring; a declaration intended to inspire full confidence; something designed to give confidence to someone.
“Whereof he hath given assurance unto all men, in that he hath raised him from the dead.”
“Assurances of support came pouring in daily.”
- The state of being assured; total confidence or trust; a lack of doubt; certainty; guarantee.
“Let us draw with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience.”
“The storm took countless lives and forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee from their communities with no assurance of returning soon.”
- Firmness of mind; undoubting steadiness; intrepidity, courage, or self-confidence.
“the affairs of the Tarkish camp together with assurance”
“Conversation, when they come into the world, soon gives them a becoming assurance”
- Excessive boldness; impudence; audacity
“His assurance is intolerable.”
“You confined to the society of the illiterate and vulgar all your life! I wonder how the young man could have the assurance to ask it. He must have a pretty good opinion of himself.”
- Betrothal; affiance.
- Insurance; a contract for the payment of a sum on occasion of a certain event, as loss or death. Assurance is used in relation to life contingencies, and insurance in relation to other contingencies. It is called temporary assurance, in the time within which the contingent event must happen is limited.
- Any written or other legal evidence of the conveyance of property; a conveyance; a deed.
“the legal evidences of the conveyance of property are called the common assurances of the kingdom.”
- Subjective certainty of one's salvation.