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  1. 8 juil. 2013 · Evidence or Evidences of Christianity , Evidences of the Christian Religion, or simply The Evidences. 6. a. Information, whether in the form of personal testimony, the language of documents, or the production of material objects, that is given in a legal investigation, to establish the fact or point in question. Also, an evidence = a piece of ...

  2. 21 oct. 2014 · The evidence or argument that compels the mind to accept an assertion as true. [American Heritage Dictionary via the Free Dictionary] In some fields of enquiry (Law, or the Sciences) a preponderance of evidence, and a lack of evidence to the contrary, would be regarded as a proof of some statement or assertion. In others (Mathematics or Logic ...

  3. 25 mars 2020 · 12. I want to explain why this is wrong but I can’t. This is because evidence is a non-count noun, so you can't talk about "an evidence" or "another evidence". This was previously addressed in the question, "Is 'evidence' countable?" You could talk about "more evidence" or "further evidence" to avoid the wordier (but just as correct) "another ...

  4. Evidence is not usually used in the plural form, except in apologetics. I think, however, if you give us the surrounding paragraph, we can do even better in revising it. Evidence always supports something; your sentence would be stronger if it were more immediate to see just what the evidence comprises.

  5. 16 oct. 2014 · Evidence can be used as a verb according to Merriam Webster. Its usage as a verb is not common on either side of the Atlantic. "We need to formally document the agreement with these forms". But when evidence is "correctly" used as a verb, it has the sense of establish by evidence, to make evident, demonstrate, prove.

  6. So you could say that anecdote, testimony, and analogy are forms of evidence that do not inherently connote empiricism. Given these alternatives to empirical evidence that nonetheless fall under the umbrella term evidence, I think evidence doesn't inherently connote empiricism and may be the best term to use.

  7. 22 avr. 2020 · 11 1 6. 1. There is evidence that it is in use as a verb, but I don't encounter it very often. In your example sentence I think "the study showed that..." or "the study found evidence that..." would be better. – nnnnnn. Apr 22, 2020 at 4:31. Dictionaries study common usage, and base their entries upon it.

  8. apparent would mean there is room for doubt, and opportunity is being provided to argue or disprove; evident also means there is some evidence and a conclusion has been drawn, although self-evident, like obvious, could be used to indicate that no evidence is needed other than seeing (and counting what is as obvious as, indeed part of, the hand ...

  9. My impression of conjecture is that it involves forming an unconfirmed hypothesis or jumping to a conclusion—but that it doesn't necessarily involve presenting evidence selectively in order to support that conclusion (as in the posted question). A person might honestly and objectively present all of the known facts about a case and then make a conjecture as to what conclusion these facts ...

  10. 23 déc. 2013 · 20. I believe the expressions should be "as evidenced by" and "as is evident from," respectively. My preference, however, would be to opt for neither expression. Instead, I normally use "as demonstrated by." It's identical in meaning to the phrase you're trying to use, and there is little chance of either confusion or misuse, as is possible ...

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