In probabilistic terms, evidence increases the probability that a proposition holds, relative to its value without such evidence, whereas proof raises the probability to certainty. I find evidence can be. I'm looking for a word that describes something that is not yet a scientifically proven fact, but people intuitively think to be true.
The containers are countable but not the contents.the ' weights of evidence' would be. The word is not hypothesis as i'm not describing the scienti. [often with verbal noun] indicating the means of achieving.
This was previously addressed in the question, is 'evidence'. If not, what other better word can be used in the place of evidence as a verb? On hand is if you have something in stock. The answer that your comment links to (which was posted in 2011) does indeed say that leaving the phrase open is an option—and the question poster.
See the second definition of by, from oxford dictionaries: In this instance, evidenced by. Formally, you would refer to the enclosed items in the body of your letter followed by (enclosed) and then, under the signature at the end of the letter you'd write enclosures (x). A hathi trust search of the bilingual (spanish/english) edition of the cecil jane translation of the four voyages of columbus:
At hand seems to me as if you have something in reach. A documentary history reports 90 instances of. Is it fine to used evidence as verb? And in hand can be used.
What's the difference between at hand, on hand and in hand?