adduce
IPA: ʌdˈus
verb
- (transitive) To bring forward or offer, as an argument, passage, or consideration which bears on a statement or case; to cite; to allege.
- (transitive, law, Scotland) To produce in proof.
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Examples of "adduce" in Sentences
- And what examples can you adduce of “inflammatory speech” by VC bloggers?
- Pundits who want to cut doctors 'pay never adduce any credible reasons for their proposal.
- As long as events adduce to the growth of government, Obama is satisfied to take no action.
- What evidence can you adduce that we are plagued by a great many “frivolous” medical malpractice suits?
- On the other hand, if events adduce to the furtherance of law, independence, freedom, then he spares no effort to squelch it.
- On the one hand, I really, honestly, do see, hear, and experience everything that atheists adduce as evidence that God is an illusion.
- Additionally, suppose the designer placed into the cell some other systems for which we cannot adduce enough evidence to conclude design.
- To win, “Virgin Mobile must adduce evidence that would permit a reasonable jury to find that someone committed an act of direct infringement and that MetroPCS either intentionally induced that person to commit the act or continued to supply reflashed handsets to that person when it knew or had reason to know that he was engaging in trademark infringement.”
- Wilberforce was quite prepared to allow science unfettered freedom to research, and to accepts its findings, just because he did not think that science was the sole truth; if facts emerged which proved that men were descended from some primordial fungus, he could agree, but go on to enter a further ` but ', and adduce further considerations that marked humanity off from the rest of creation.
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