corroborate

IPA: kɝˈɑbɝeɪt

verb

  • (transitive) To confirm or support something with additional evidence; to attest or vouch for.
  • (transitive) To make strong; to strengthen.
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Examples of "corroborate" in Sentences

  • Collaborate/Corroborate: To collaborate is to work closely with others; to corroborate is to confirm the truth of something.
  • * '' 'Collaborate/Corroborate' '': To collaborate is to work closely with others; to corroborate is to confirm the truth of something.
  • As an old neighbor of mine said when he painted the top board of his fence green, he wanted it "to kind of corroborate with his blinds."
  • Another serious procedural flaw in your Report is your reliance on hearsay and accusations made anonymously to "corroborate" your allegations.
  • These terms corroborate and identify themselves with the most ancient of traditionary customs, long ere princes had monopolised the surface of coined money with their own images and superscriptions.
  • It is entirely unclear just what North did to "corroborate" US military claims of Taliban deaths, but his efforts to bolster the military stance appear about to go down in the same flames that killed 90 Afghan civilians.
  • UNIDENTIFIED MALE: The LAPD police chief said that they are looking for the coroner ` s report to corroborate the cause of death -- "corroborate," which clearly implies that they have a strong belief that something was involved, and that something in this case is clearly drug abuse.
  • One historian who has actually written extensively on the response to Katrina, Douglas Brinkley, told me today that, you know, it does kind of corroborate a lot of the information he got that the White House, while they may not have sought to drag Michael Brown through the mud, certainly was happy that he was at least deflecting some criticism from them.

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synonyms for corroborate
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