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英文字典中文字典相关资料:


  • Is evidence countable? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    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
  • As evidenced by or as evident by? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Evidence can be a verb; whether it is too archaic to use is a personal view Evident cannot be, so as evident by is wrong, possibly an eggcorn – Tim Lymington
  • Evidenced in or by? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Be or show evidence of: 'The quality of the bracelet, as evidenced by the workmanship, is exceptional' The thing that is being achieved in your sample sentence is the evidencing of the "ability to collaborate with people from culturally diverse backgrounds", the means of achieving it is the "success in the US, Europe and Asia "
  • Whats the difference in meaning between evidence and proof?
    Evidence may be used to form a theory or hypothesis Additional evidence may refine such a theory Proof shows the theory to be a fact Example: Adding one apple to a basket with another apple results in a basket with two apples in This could be proof that 1+1 is indeed equal to 2, but only evidence that 2+2 may equal 4
  • whats the difference between apparent, evident and obvious?
    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
  • At hand vs on hand vs in hand - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    I tried to break down the usage of these three (four if you count "to hand"), hopefully I'm right about it, at least in part :) So here are my thoughts:
  • phrases - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    And it strains credulity to assume that this defendant , who under the evidence wilfully violated the statute , had to engage in any such guesswork with respect to the law governing his conduct; This, coupled with an earlier definition for 'credulity' : credulity (countable and uncountable, plural credulities)
  • What are the differences between assumption and presumption?
    "Pre" (not per) does mean before and "ad" does mean to in this instance, but the time dependence you infer is an etymological fallacy A presumption is made before the proper evidence or authority is manifest Both a presumption and an assumption may be made at the same time and persist for the same time As the OP's driving example shows
  • Difference between inconclusive and non-conclusive (nonconclusive)
    Broadly, inconclusive is commonly used in opposition to the second meaning We say that the evidence was inconclusive, meaning that it was insufficient to allow a definite judgement to be made The meeting was inconclusive if no decision could be made Non-conclusive is in opposition to the second meaning
  • Non-repudiable vs non-refutable vs non-reputable in computer security
    Proving that evidence (such as a document) has not been tampered with may involve establishing a chain of custody: the order in which a piece of criminal evidence should be handled by persons investigating a case, specif the unbroken trail of accountability that ensures the physical security of samples, data, and records in a criminal





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