the.com/fide
latin for 'faith' — the root that makes every promise sound official.
means an ablative form of the latin fides, meaning good faith, trust, or honor, best known as the back half of 'bona fide.'
from from latin fides (trust, faith), itself tied to the verb fidere, to trust — romans used the phrase bona fide, 'in good faith,' as legal shorthand for honest dealing, and english borrowed it whole in the 1500s.
root familygives us fidelity, confide, and infidel
legal rootsoriginally a roman contract law term
literal senseablative case means 'with good faith'