meaning - "to suspect" vs "to be suspicious of"


What's the difference between "to suspect someone" vs "to be suspicious of someone"?


For example, what's the difference between these two sentences:




  1. I'm sorry for suspecting you.




  2. I'm sorry for being suspicious of you.





Answer



In many contexts, both forms mean exactly the same. But I think #1 would occur more often.



1: I'm sorry for suspecting you.
Strongly implies you suspected someone was guilty of some specific misdeed.


2: I'm sorry for being suspicious of you.
May be used in contexts where you had more general misgivings about the moral character or motives of a person, though it can also (perhaps less commonly) be used in the same contexts as #1.





Another specific example of a difference; suppose you download and install updated video driver software on your computer, after which your computer keeps going wrong...



The driver is suspect (I think it contains bugs that are accidentally causing my problems).
The driver is suspicious (I think it contains malware that is deliberately harming my system).



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