undeniable
Word family
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++un·de·ni·a·ble /ˌʌndɪˈnaɪəbəl◂/ AWL adjective CERTAINLY/DEFINITELYdefinitely true or certain 不可否认的,无可争辩的 undeniable proof 确证► see thesaurus at true —undeniably adverbExamples from the Corpus
undeniable• Her popularity among teenagers is undeniable.• Either way, the transformation of the area where Broadway and Seventh Avenue converge is as remarkable as it is undeniable.• His commitment is clear and his integrity is undeniable.• That the suspension bridge was both graceful to look at and economical to build was undeniable.• The undeniable and disturbing fact is that violence exists within each of us.• The speech, an undeniable disappointment, had indeed been given in an unusually dull monotone and at great speed.• It was undeniable that low wages as well as unemployment were a major cause of poverty.• Eventually enough of these shapes were collected and studied for it to be undeniable that this is just what they must be.• An undeniable truth hit Thomas in his Yale years: Black liberal leadership had not prepared black people to compete.un·de·ni·a·ble adjectiveChineseSyllable
or Corpus definitely certain true
undeniable
un‧de‧ni‧a‧ble AC /ˌʌndɪˈnaɪəbəl◂/
adjectivedefinitely true or certain:
undeniable proof
—undeniably adverb
▪ true based on real facts, and not imagined or invented: The film was based on a true story. | Do you think the rumours are true?
▪accurate based on facts and not containing any mistakes – used about descriptions, information, and numbers: The measurements are accurate. | His assessment of the current economic situation is accurate.
▪undeniable/indisputable definitely true, so that no one can argue or disagree about it: It is indisputable that the situation has got worse. | The decline in inflation was undeniable, even if the reasons for the decline were unclear.
▪factual based on facts, or involving facts: The court makes its decision based on factual evidence. | There is very little factual information about the incident. | a factual account of what happened | The questions ask for a purely factual answer, not for opinion.
▪verifiable formal able to be proven to be true or correct: The data was verifiable.
▪it is a fact used when saying that something is definitely true: It is a fact that women live longer than men.
▪be the truth to be true – used when saying that someone is not lying: What I told you was the truth.
▪be the case if a situation is the case, that is the way the situation truly is: It is certainly the case that crime rates are lower in Europe than in the US.
un‧de‧ni‧a‧ble AC /ˌʌndɪˈnaɪəbəl◂/
adjectivedefinitely true or certain:
—undeniably adverb
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