committed
committed — adjective
1. Someone who is committed to a person, cause, or activity gives them steady suppo
Someone who is committed to a person, cause, or activity gives them steady support and effort because they believe in that person or thing.
Dr. Okafor has been a committed member of the hospital board for over twenty years.
attributive: committed member of [group]
The charity needs committed volunteers who can work every Saturday morning.
attributive: committed + noun (volunteers)
As a committed environmentalist, Priya cycles to work and avoids single-use plastics.
Her committed attitude toward lesson planning earned her the school's top teaching prize.
The clinic is run entirely by a small group of committed local nurses.
- dedicated
Nearly identical; dedicated often emphasizes single-minded focus on a goal, while committed also carries a sense of obligation.
- devoted
Adds personal affection and emotional warmth that committed does not necessarily include.
- loyal
Stresses not abandoning someone or something, especially through difficulty.
- faithful
Focuses on reliability and keeping promises over a long period.
- uncommitted
The direct opposite; not giving support or effort.
- indifferent
Lacking interest or concern, whereas committed implies strong positive engagement.
文法句型
committed + to + noun/gerund
committed + noun
用法筆記
This sense can appear before a noun (a committed teacher) or after the verb be (She is committed to her students). When used predicatively, it is always followed by to.
常見錯誤
2. If a person or organization is committed to a particular plan or action, they ha
If a person or organization is committed to a particular plan or action, they have formally agreed to take part in it and intend to follow through.
The company is committed to reducing its carbon emissions by forty percent.
predicative: is committed to + gerund (reducing)
Both sides are committed to reaching a peace agreement before the end of the year.
Theo is committed to running the marathon despite his recent knee injury.
The government is committed to building fifteen new public health centres by 2027.
- uncommitted
Not yet having made a pledge or promise about a plan.
- free
Not bound by any promise or obligation to act.
文法句型
be + committed + to + noun/gerund
用法筆記
This sense is used only after a verb (predicative position) — you cannot say a committed plan. It emphasizes a formal or definite promise about a specific future action. Distinguish from sense 1 (LOYAL & DEDICATED): sense 1 describes a general character of loyalty, while sense 2 refers to a concrete pledge tied to a particular plan.