sceptical
sceptical — adjective
1. not willing to believe something without clear evidence; having or showing doubt
not willing to believe something without clear evidence; having or showing doubt about whether a claim, idea, or plan is true, genuine, or likely to succeed
Diya was deeply sceptical about the company's promise to double her salary within a year.
sceptical about + noun phrase; deeply (common adverb)
Many residents remain sceptical that the new train link will ever be completed on time.
sceptical + that-clause for doubting a future event
Joaquín raised a sceptical eyebrow when his brother claimed he had won the lottery.
William has always been sceptical of eating food labelled 'healthier' without any proof from scientists.
The committee was sceptical about whether budget cuts would save money in the long run.
- doubtful
More neutral and general; often used for uncertainty about outcomes ('doubtful whether it will rain') rather than a principled stance of questioning
- cynical
Stronger and more negative; suggests a general distrust of people's motives rather than an evidence-based questioning of a specific claim
- suspicious
Carries a connotation of expecting something wrong or dishonest, whereas sceptical implies a rational demand for proof
- questioning
More neutral; focuses on the act of asking rather than on withholding belief
文法句型
sceptical + about/of + noun phrase
sceptical + that-clause
sceptical + about/of + whether/why/how + clause
sceptical + noun (look/expression/eyebrow)
用法筆記
The American English spelling is skeptical, though the word is understood and used in both varieties. This adjective is frequently followed by about or of when the object of doubt is a thing or idea, and by a that-clause when expressing doubt about a proposition or future event.