conclusiveness 的定义
- serving to settle or decide a question; decisive; convincing: conclusive evidence.
- tending to terminate; closing.
conclusiveness 近义词
等同于 assuredness
conclusiveness 的近义词 6 个
conclusiveness 的反义词 4 个
等同于 decidedness
等同于 decisiveness
conclusiveness 的近义词 11 个
- assertiveness
- firmness
- willpower
- determination
- purpose
- purposefulness
- resoluteness
- resolution
- resolve
- decidedness
- emphaticalness
conclusiveness 的反义词 2 个
更多conclusiveness例句
- Now, a conclusive proof posted in November has certifiably identified all the special tetrahedra there are to find.
- Still, it is hard to make conclusive statements about the relationship between higher temperatures and snow because of how infrequently snowstorms occur.
- That data is not fully conclusive because it is not based on comprehensive genomic sequencing.
- They recently saw hints of a discovery in the first dozen years of data and hope for a conclusive result soon when they process the entire 16-year run, which will become part of Arecibo’s scientific legacy.
- The new study doesn’t provide conclusive answers, but it does expose a possibly telling imbalance in the cichlids’ evolutionary tree.
- Finding that conclusive link, however, seems unlikely given the track record of these studies.
- There is conclusive proof that Russia has been shelling Ukraine since at least July 16th, the day before MH17 was shot down.
- There remains no conclusive evidence as to what happened on or to the plane.
- For three weeks, the government continuously failed to act publicly or release conclusive information on the emergency.
- The contrast is stark and the case conclusive when you examine the records of the second Bush and Barack Obama.
- By statute the stock record of ownership is usually made the conclusive test of the right to vote.
- This last seems to me to present the greatest difficulty, and the evidence at present appears scarcely conclusive.
- This examination is made by an examiner, whose decision, however, is not conclusive and may be set aside by the commissioner.
- Finally, in 1829, Bouvard wrote Minoret asking him to come to Paris to assist in some conclusive tests of magnetism.
- The question of dependence is one of fact; contributions by the deceased tend to establish this, but are not conclusive.