Assertions can be categorized as a noun.
Noun |
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assertion - a declaration that is made emphatically (as if no supporting evidence were necessary) | ||
assertion - the act of affirming or asserting or stating something |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | noun | Goal is to (politely?) refute Loretta Lynch's and Carl Woods' continued assertions that 1) California's move to deregulate was based solely on ideology with no basis in fact and 2) the solution is to turn back the clock to command-and-control regulation. | |
2. | noun | The fact that these assertions have consistently proved to be without foundation unfortunately does not prevent their repetition. | |
3. | noun | Have you ever compared the assertions of official propaganda to reality? | |
4. | noun | So long as you have no evidence for your assertions, I am not having this conversation. | |
5. | noun | Interesting assertions! | |
6. | noun | It is important to note that his assertion is groundless. | |
7. | noun | Nobody will believe his assertion that he is innocent. | |
8. | noun | An assertion isn't a proof. | |
9. | noun | The truth value of an assertion may be a probability value. | |
10. | noun | What should we deduce from Aristotle's assertion that women have fewer teeth than men: that he had small knowledge of women or that he couldn't count? | |
11. | noun | Negating the assertion requires a negative augend, but all augends are products of factors on the unit interval. | |
12. | noun | There is no arguing with the assertion of the great linguist Claude Hagège: never before in the history of humanity, has a language had a "comparable extension in the world to what English now has." | |
13. | noun | He believed her assertion to be simply impossible and assented to the proposal. | |
14. | noun | Can you prove the validity of your assertion? | |
15. | noun | The Anarchists are right in everything; in the negation of the existing order, and in the assertion that, without authority, there could not be worse violence than that of authority under existing conditions. |
Sentence | |
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noun | |
Goal is to (politely?) refute Loretta Lynch's and Carl Woods' continued assertions that 1) California's move to deregulate was based solely on ideology with no basis in fact and 2) the solution is to turn back the clock to command-and-control regulation. |
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The fact that these assertions have consistently proved to be without foundation unfortunately does not prevent their repetition. | |
Have you ever compared the assertions of official propaganda to reality? | |
So long as you have no evidence for your assertions, I am not having this conversation. | |
Interesting assertions! | |
It is important to note that his assertion is groundless. | |
Nobody will believe his assertion that he is innocent. | |
An assertion isn't a proof. | |
The truth value of an assertion may be a probability value. | |
What should we deduce from Aristotle's assertion that women have fewer teeth than men: that he had small knowledge of women or that he couldn't count? | |
Negating the assertion requires a negative augend, but all augends are products of factors on the unit interval. | |
There is no arguing with the assertion of the great linguist Claude Hagège: never before in the history of humanity, has a language had a "comparable extension in the world to what English now has." | |
He believed her assertion to be simply impossible and assented to the proposal. | |
Can you prove the validity of your assertion? | |
The Anarchists are right in everything; in the negation of the existing order, and in the assertion that, without authority, there could not be worse violence than that of authority under existing conditions. |