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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'confident yet' is correct and can be used in written English.
You can use this phrase when expressing that someone or something is both confident and uncertain at the same time. For example, you might write, "He stood confidently yet hesitantly in front of the crowd."
Exact(57)
Thomas comes across as confident, yet humble.
"We aren't really confident yet," Mr. Johnston said.
"I'm not confident yet," said the 19-year-old Williams.
Supremely confident, yet given to black internal monologues.
A refugee from Venezuela, Ms. Marquez carries herself with a confident yet cautious air.
He seemed relaxed and confident, yet on edge, like a man eager for battle.
It is a mind-set found perhaps nowhere else among the top-10 teams: the Spartans feel confident yet underrated.
"I loved the experience of doing it, but I'm not confident yet that I am good at it.
Similar(3)
For the benefit of the uninitiated, Alan Partridge is Steve Coogan's most famous creation, a gloriously shallow, ignorant and over-confident yet insecure broadcaster whom Mr Coogan introduced on radio ("On The Hour") in 1991.
On "Labyrinth," you can hear Sting straining to be proper, thinking his way through every precious phrase, when those melancholy Dowland love songs with their great tunes would benefit hugely from Sting's being the same self-confident (yet still morose) guy who sang "King of Pain".
The text itself meanders from career moves to inventive room layouts to Mr. Garcia's personality quirks ("terribly self-confident yet avid for reassurance").
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com