corroboration
21corroboration — cor|rob|o|ra|tion [ kə,rabə reıʃn ] noun uncount FORMAL evidence or information that supports what someone has said …
22corroboration — cor·rob·o·ra·tion || kə‚rÉ’bÉ™ reɪʃn n. reinforcement; confirmation; support …
23corroboration — n. Confirmation …
24corroboration — cor·rob·o·ra·tion …
25corroboration — UK [kəˌrɒbəˈreɪʃ(ə)n] / US [kəˌrɑbəˈreɪʃ(ə)n] noun [uncountable] formal evidence or information that supports what someone has said …
26corroboration — /kərɒbəˈreɪʃən/ (say kuhrobuh rayshuhn) noun 1. the act of corroborating. 2. a corroboratory fact, statement, etc. 3. Law additional evidence from another source, deemed necessary to support the evidence of certain categories of witnesses… …
27corroboration — noun confirmation that some fact or statement is true through the use of documentary evidence • Syn: ↑documentation, ↑certification • Derivationally related forms: ↑corroborate, ↑certify (for: ↑certification), ↑ …
28Contemporaneous corroboration — is an historical method used by historians to establish facts beyond their limited lifespan. It is used to locate, identify and examine testimony of primary source witnesses. It is similar to methods used by police and lawyers based upon Mosaic… …
29Karl Popper — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Popper. Karl R. Popper Philosophe occidental XXe siècle …
30Corroborating evidence — (in corroboration ) is evidence that tends to support a proposition that is already supported by some evidence, therefore confirming the proposition. For example, W, a witness, testifies that she saw X drive his automobile into a green car.… …