He was professional, thoughtful and, most importantly, trustworthy at all times.
From the kentucky.com
Also bring along the phone number of your sponsor and a few trustworthy friends.
From the blogs.psychcentral.com
Financial services products such as pensions and endowments are not trustworthy.
From the guardian.co.uk
He found several trustworthy men to keep the line orderly and act as his guards.
From the latimes.com
You hoped against reality that they would really be trustworthy public servants.
From the infowars.com
If you keep the vandals off, Wikipedia has a better rep and is more trustworthy.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Samuel, the Judge, had sons who were dishonest and not trustworthy of the faith.
From the en.wikipedia.org
At Microsoft, we have made what we call trustworthy computing our top priority.
From the economist.com
Student popularity polls are not a trustworthy judgment relative to competency.
From the ocregister.com
More examples
Worthy of trust or belief; "a trustworthy report"; "an experienced and trustworthy traveling companion"
Taking responsibility for one's conduct and obligations; "trustworthy public servants"
(trustworthiness) the trait of deserving trust and confidence
Deserving of trust, reliable
(trustworthiness) The personal state or quality of being trustworthy or reliable. Commonly regarded as a virtue
(Trustworthiness) Audience's perception of a speaker's reliability and dependability. [SB]
(Trustworthiness) The extent to which a leader is believed and trusted by his or her followers.
(Trustworthiness) The fact that edition can be anonymous, or pseudonymous, raises the question of the trustfulness of information. To solve this issue, some wikis (Citizendium is an example) request users to create an account and log in before they can edit pages. ...
(Trustworthiness) the "goodliest vesture in the sight of God".