PROVE vs EVIDENCE: NOUN
- An obsolete form of proof.
- That which is legally submitted to competent tribunal, as a means of ascertaining the truth of any alleged matter of fact under investigation before it; means of making proof; -- the latter, strictly speaking, not being synonymous with evidence, but rather the effect of it.
- One who bears witness.
- That which makes evident or manifest; that which furnishes, or tends to furnish, proof; any mode of proof; the ground of belief or judgement
- Evidence sufficient not only to go to the jury, but to require them to find accordingly if no credible contrary evidence be given.
- Testimony to having witnessed an act or event, as distinguished from negative evidence, or the testimony of a witness who was present and observant, that such act or event did not take place. As between equally credible witnesses, positive testimony is entitled to more weight than negative, because it may be that one witness, though present, did not see or hear that which another witness did.
- Plainly visible; conspicuous: a recent phraseadopted from the French en evidence.
- The rules by which the reception of testimony is regulated in courts of justice: as, a treatise on evidence; professor of pleading and evidence.
- In a more restricted sense, that part of such information or testimony which is properly receivable or has actually been received by the court on the trial of an issue: sometimes more specifically characterized as judicial evidence: as, that is not evidence, my lord; the age of the accused is not in evidence. In this latter sense sometimes, especially in equity practice, spoken of as the proofs.
- Information, whether consisting of the testimony of witnesses or the contents of documents, or derived from inspection of objects, which tends, or is presented as tending, to make clear the fact in question in a legal investigation or trial; testimony: as, he offered evidence of good character.
- One who supplies testimony or proof; a witness: now used chiefly in the phrase “turning state's (or queen's) evidence.”
- Specifically, in law: A deed; an instrument or document by which a fact is made evident: as, evidences of title (that is, title-deeds); evidences of debt (that is, written obligations to pay money).
- The means by which the existence or non-existence or the truth or falsehood of an alleged fact is ascertained or made evident; testimony; witness; hence, more generally, the facts upon which reasoning from effect to cause is based; that which makes evident or plain; the experiential premises of a proof.
- The state of being evident, clear, or plain, and not liable to doubt or question; evidentness; clearness; plainness; certitude. See mediate and immediate evidence, etc., below.
- The set of legal rules determining what testimony, documents, and objects may be admitted as proof in a trial.
- The means by which an allegation may be proven, such as oral testimony, documents, or physical objects.
- Anything admitted by a court to prove or disprove alleged matters of fact in a trial.
- (law) all the means by which any alleged matter of fact whose truth is investigated at judicial trial is established or disproved
- An indication that makes something evident
- Your basis for belief or disbelief; knowledge on which to base belief
- Facts or observations presented in support of an assertion.
- To confess a crime and give evidence against one's accomplices.
- Evidence for the government or the people.
- Evidence for the crown, in English courts; equivalent to state's evidence in American courts.
- A thing or set of things helpful in forming a conclusion or judgment.
- Something indicative; an indication or set of indications.
- See under Circumstantial, Conclusive, etc.
PROVE vs EVIDENCE: VERB
- Cause to puff up with a leaven
- Provide evidence for
- Increase in volume
- Put to the test, as for its quality, or give experimental use to
- Prove formally; demonstrate by a mathematical, formal proof
- Take a trial impression of
- Obtain probate of
- Be shown or be found to be
- Simple past of proove.
- To demonstrate that something is true or viable; to give proof for.
- To turn out; to manifest.
- To turn out to be.
- To put to the test, to make trial of.
- To experience
- Establish the validity of something, as by an example, explanation or experiment
- Give evidence
- Provide evidence for
- Provide evidence for; stand as proof of; show by one's behavior, attitude, or external attributes
- To provide evidence for, or suggest the truth of.
PROVE vs EVIDENCE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To demonstrate the reality of (something).
- To succeed; to turn out as expected.
- To be found by experience, trial, or result; to turn out to be
- To make trial; to essay.
- To be shown to be such; turn out.
- To show (oneself) to be what is specified or to have a certain characteristic.
- To establish the authenticity of (a will).
- To demonstrate the validity of (a hypothesis or proposition).
- To verify (the result of a calculation).
- To subject (a gun, for instance) to a test.
- To make a sample impression of (type); proof.
- To find out or learn (something) through experience.
- To establish the truth or validity of (something) by the presentation of argument or evidence.
- To establish by the required amount of evidence.
- N/A
PROVE vs EVIDENCE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To take a trial impression of; to take a proof of.
- To test, evince, ascertain, or verify, as the correctness of any operation or result; thus, in subtraction, if the difference between two numbers, added to the lesser number, makes a sum equal to the greater, the correctness of the subtraction is proved.
- To gain experience of the good or evil of; to know by trial; to experience; to suffer.
- To ascertain or establish the genuineness or validity of; to verify.
- To try or to ascertain by an experiment, or by a test or standard; to test
- To evince, establish, or ascertain, as truth, reality, or fact, by argument, testimony, or other evidence.
- To indicate clearly; exemplify or prove.
- To render evident or clear; to prove; to evince.
PROVE vs EVIDENCE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To thrive; be with young: generally said of cattle.
- To succeed; turn out well.
- Hence To become; be.
- To be found or ascertained to be by experience or trial; be ascertained or shown by the event or something subsequent; turn out to be: as, the report proves to be true; to prove useful or wholesome; to prove faithful or treacherous.
- To make trial; essay.
- Synonyms To verify, justify, confirm, substantiate, make good, manifest.
- In printing, to take a proof of.
- In arithmetic, to ascertain or demonstrate the correctness of (an operation or result) by a calculation in the nature of a check: as, to prove a sum.
- To have personal experience of; experience; enjoy or suffer.
- To establish the authenticity or validity of; obtain probate of: as, to prove a will. See probate.
- To render certain; put out of doubt (as a proposition) by adducing evidence and argumentation; show; demonstrate.
- Prove formally
- To try by experiment, or by a test or standard; test; make trial of; put to the test: as, to prove the strength of gunpowder; to prove the contents of a vessel by comparing it with a standard measure.
- In homeopathic practice, to test the therapeutic action of (a drug) by observing the symptoms following its administration in appreciable amounts to persons in health.
- To make evident or clear; show clearly; prove.
- To attest or support by evidence or testimony; witness.
- Knowledge on which to base belief
- Your basis for belief or disbelief
- Stand as proof of
- (idiom) (in evidence) Plainly visible; to be seen.
- (idiom) (in evidence) As legal evidence.
PROVE vs EVIDENCE: RELATED WORDS
- Essay, Turn out, Try out, Rise, Leaven, Shew, Try, Raise, Testify, Examine, Test, Show, Evidence, Establish, Demonstrate
- Conclusive, Evidentiary, Corroboration, Proof, Bear witness, Attest, Tell, Certify, Show, Manifest, Ascertain, Demonstrate, Grounds, Testify, Prove
PROVE vs EVIDENCE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Disprove, Bear witness, Essay, Turn out, Rise, Shew, Try, Raise, Testify, Examine, Test, Show, Evidence, Establish, Demonstrate
- Corroborating, Conclusive, Evidentiary, Corroboration, Proof, Bear witness, Attest, Tell, Certify, Show, Manifest, Ascertain, Demonstrate, Testify, Prove
PROVE vs EVIDENCE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- They too had come with something to prove.
- Remember, specials skills are typically easier to prove.
- We have the stats to prove our success.
- IDPs must have documentation to prove their identities.
- Find ways to prove it, shift your focus to finding ways to prove it.
- Committing the error of trying to get someone else to prove you are wrong, when it is your responsibility to prove you are correct.
- Think about the law and what you can prove and what you yet need to prove.
- Explain why blood type data cannot prove who the father of a baby E, and can only prove who the father is not.
- Main applicant must prove that they have enough funds to make the required investment, and prove the legal source of these funds.
- We, too sanguine enthusiasm would a plan eventually prove all the then, but prove an ultimate cure in the future.
- Direct evidence of bias may be strong but circumstantial evidence of discrimination in a particular case.
- When it is established that primary evidence is not available, secondary evidence may be accepted.
- Evidence production techniques, development of the oral trial and evaluation of evidence.
- Find out this along with sources of evidence and how to request this evidence.
- What types of evidence are usually admitted, and how is evidence usually taken?
- There is scarce evidence that CON laws resulted in cost reductions and some evidence suggests the opposite.
- Evidence that will prevail until contradicted and overcome by other evidence.
- Her case is a mix of both circumstantial evidence, evidence of pretext, and direct evidence of discrimination.
- There are two types of evidence which are generally presented during a trial; direct evidence and circumstantial evidence.
- Evidence disproving other evidence previously given or reestablishing the credibility of challenged evidence.
PROVE vs EVIDENCE: QUESTIONS
- Did Helfgott prove the ternary Goldbach conjecture?
- Can Presuppositionalists prove the existence of God?
- Does HPV in monogamous relationships prove unfaithful?
- Does apologetics prove the existence of Christianity?
- How does magnetic reversal prove seafloor spreading?
- Does QR code prove ancient extraterrestrial contact?
- What does saltedsal prove about isosceles triangles?
- Does circumstantial evidence prove guilt or innocence?
- What does the Crown have to prove to prove indecent assault?
- How does salt's efforts to prove her innocence serve to prove?
- Are electronic confirmations reliable audit evidence?
- Is evidence collected illegally always inadmissable?
- What is admissible evidence and Inadmissible Evidence?
- Does anecdotal evidence count as scientific evidence?
- Which evidence is not bound by evidence introduced under this section?
- Can an admission of evidence be substantially the only evidence?
- Why do 47% of property evidence reports not include evidence?
- How is transient evidence different from pattern evidence?
- What evidence can the court draw from circumstantial evidence?
- What kind of evidence is used in documentary evidence?