|
Definition of Adducing
1. Noun. Citing as evidence or proof.
Definition of Adducing
1. Verb. (present participle of adduce) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Adducing
1. adduce [v] - See also: adduce
Lexicographical Neighbors of Adducing
Literary usage of Adducing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Hammon on Evidence: Covering Burden of Proof, Presumptions, Judicial Notice by Louis Lougee Hammon (1907)
"Ascertainment of burden of adducing evidence. Having considered the rules for
ascertaining which party bears the burden of proof in its proper sense, ..."
2. Outlines of Logic and of Encyclopaedia of Philosophy: Dictated Portions of by Hermann Lotze (1887)
"CONCERNING THE adducing OF PROOF. § 69. In a judgment, what interests us practically
is its truth. Now the simpler case is this, that a proposition with a ..."
3. Publications by Folklore Society (Great Britain) (1899)
"... by adducing any number of contradictory Australian myths. To adduce these,
however, is a great part of his criticism of myself. ..."
4. Pleading and Practice of the High Court of Chancery by Edmund Robert Daniell, Thomas Emerson Headlam (1865)
"ENGLISH SYSTEM OF adducing AND TAKING EVIDENCE,— ORAL EXAMINATIONS AND AFFIDAVITS,
... and the mode of adducing and taking evidence orally, or by affidavit, ..."
5. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann, Edward Aloysius Pace, Condé Bénoist Pallen, Thomas Joseph Shahan, John Joseph Wynne (1913)
"Ughelli, without, however, adducing any documentary proof, says that the Diocese of
... adducing ..."
6. A Brief for the Trial of Criminal Cases by Austin Abbott, William Constantine Beecher (1902)
"adducing other evidence. After a proposed juror has been challenged, other
witnesses may be called and examined by either party.1 'People v. Fuller, 2 Park. ..."
7. A biographical dictionary of eminent Scotsmen by Robert Chambers, Thomas Thomson (1853)
"... adducing, at the same time the letters and documents which he had received as
evidences of the fact. The Earl, much as he might feel staggered at the ..."