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evidentiary

/ev-i-den-shuh-ree/US // ˌɛv ɪˈdɛn ʃə ri //

证据性的,证据性,证据,证据的

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : evidential.
    • : Law. pertaining to or constituting evidence.

Examples

  • Police investigators failed to follow basic evidentiary procedure in the immediate aftermath of the shooting, according to the findings of the Chicago Civilian Office of Police Accountability.

  • That proximity to the escalators is also a symbolic and physical link to the lower floors of the museum, where the subject matter deals with history in more strictly narrative and evidentiary ways.

  • Verhaegen, along with a handful of other scientists, began to amass new kinds of evidentiary support for an aquatic phase in human history.

  • The legislation also would have changed the legal standard for overturning an election from “reasonable doubt” to “preponderance of the evidence” — a much lower evidentiary bar.

  • Investigators determined that very little evidentiary value could be obtained from this recording as it was conducted after the raid was over.

  • The evidentiary rules for conviction were nearly impossible to meet.

  • “We have a detailed audit system that tracks the life cycle of an evidentiary item for record-keeping purposes,” she said.

  • Nencini decided that the appellate court that set Knox free erred in evidentiary and legal matters.

  • Intelligent design (ID) and creationism lack this broad-based evidentiary support.

  • To call this claim “speculative” radically overstates its evidentiary foundation.

  • Please, Mr. Oswald—when you say she started relating this incident, it doesn't help us any, it is not evidentiary.