To be confirmed usually means that something has been verified as true, made official, or (in a religious sense) you’ve completed a specific rite in a church. The exact meaning depends a lot on context.

Core meanings of “confirmed”

  • Verified as true
    When someone says “That’s confirmed,” they mean reliable evidence or an official source has checked it and said it’s true.

    • Example: “The booking is confirmed” = the reservation exists and is officially recorded.
    • Example: “The news is confirmed” = authorities or trusted sources have verified it is real.
  • Made official / approved
    “Confirmed” can also mean something has passed a decision process and is now official.

    • Example: “The candidate was confirmed” = they were officially approved for the role.
    • Example: “The date is confirmed” = everyone agreed and locked it in.

“Confirmed” as an adjective

Sometimes “confirmed” describes a person or habit:

  • Fixed habit or identity
    • “A confirmed gamer” = someone who clearly is, and will likely stay, a gamer.
    • “A confirmed night owl” = they consistently stay up late; it’s not just a phase.

Here, “confirmed” suggests something is settled and unlikely to change.

Religious meaning: being confirmed

In many Christian traditions (especially Catholic, Anglican, Orthodox, some Lutheran):

  • A sacrament/rite
    • To “be confirmed” means you go through a ceremony where you publicly affirm your faith and are blessed by a bishop or priest.
    • It usually happens after some preparation or classes and is seen as becoming a full member of the church community.
  • What it implies personally
    • You’re seen as taking ownership of your beliefs.
    • It can come with responsibilities in the church (like receiving certain sacraments, serving in new roles, etc.).

Everyday phrases with “confirmed”

  • “It’s confirmed” → It’s definitely happening / it’s true.
  • “I’m confirmed for Friday” → I’ve officially said yes and I’m on the list.
  • “He’s a confirmed coffee addict” → It’s well-established he seriously loves coffee.

Quick recap

  • General : “Confirmed” = checked and found true or made official.
  • As a description : “Confirmed X” = clearly and firmly that thing (and unlikely to change).
  • Religious : “Being confirmed” = going through a religious ceremony that marks you as a full member of a church.

If you tell me the exact sentence where you saw “confirmed,” a more precise explanation can be given for that specific context.