词汇 | credence |
释义 | credence noun[ U ] formaluk /ˈkriː.dəns/ us /ˈkriː.dəns/ the belief that something is true: 支持;相信,信任 give credence toI'm not prepared to give credence to anonymous complaints.我不会相信那些匿名投诉。 lend credence toA study carried out last year may lend some credence to the story. add credence toHis bruises added credence to his statement that he had been beaten. gain credenceThis notion is gaining credence around the world. Believing accept allegedly article of faith ascribe something to something ascription belief deluded evidently feel it in your bonesidiom give credence to something give someone the benefit of the doubtidiom hold received recognize room room for doubtidiom see something in someone/something seeing is believingidiom swallow swear credence | American Dictionarycredence noun[ U ] fmlus/ˈkri·dəns/ acceptance, support, or belief that something is true: I’d heard rumors over the years, but I never gave them any credence whatsoever. Examples of credencecredence The fact that both subject types emerge simultaneously lends credence to my account which argues that one licensing mechanism is responsible for both subject types. This example lends credence the view that the state should be considered not as separate from society but, rather, as an institution embedded within society. The fact that the experiments used very different methods and probes lends credence to their summative conclusions. As shown in section 3, preferences for the credence attribute and variety are both important and supporting motives to purchase labeled items. This adds credence to the argument that mastery of certain constructions is not wholly a function of age or language exposure. Eco-label programs have developed to provide information to consumers on credence attributes of products. So many countries have in the past 'sanitised' their data on robots that it became almost impossible to give credence to the resulting statistical tables. This lends credence to the idea that the campaigns of women for high office probably incorporated images that had more widespread effects on women especially. There is just too much experiential evidence of the long-term value of various kinds of sub-optimal intervals of time to give (7a) much credence. The relation between ideas and their social setting gives credence to the argument that philosophy is impossible without the institution of money. I draw attention to, and give credence to, whatever it happens to be, but this is secondary to the musical content and method of composition. Standing duration was positively correlated with total time awake, giving this possibility some credence. Finally, social salience theory can support a story that gives maximum credence to the idea that statutes are useful things for societies. A few writers received full satisfaction, giving credence to the survival of old belief in the 'good tsar' and his bad bureaucrats. The latter assumes that ' they ' are in many fundamental respects similar to ' us ', a point of view that gains credence from its obvious conservatism. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
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