hard evidence in English

eal and significant proof

Use "hard evidence" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hard evidence" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hard evidence", or refer to the context using the word "hard evidence" in the English Dictionary.

1. But lack of documentation limits hard evidence.

2. The Commission should have produced hard evidence of such adverse effects.

3. That paper found no hard evidence linking predatory pricing and negligent auditing.

4. 11 That paper found no hard evidence linking predatory pricing and negligent auditing.

5. This is all presupposition - we must wait until we have some hard evidence.

6. Three people with an ax to grind, no hard evidence and some travel logs?

7. But there was something else, too. Not hard evidence, but it made me wonder.

8. Footprints are one of the few pieces of hard evidence supporting the existence of Yeti.

9. Because of this lack of hard evidence, there's been a surplus of speculation over the years.

10. Experts say that there is little hard evidence to support claims of widespread Satanism among youths.

11. There are surely many answers to this question, not one of which is impeccably established by hard evidence.

12. I need to know if she could possibly have any hard evidence which could leave this company exposed.

13. For one thing he needed hard evidence, and to get it he would have to show his hand.

14. The title of “Baseless” evokes Baker’s escalating anger over his lack of hard evidence to answer that question

15. For decades, “alien Abductees” have reported what appears to be hard evidence of clandestine surveillance by military personnel

16. I have in fairness to say that, as yet, there is no hard evidence to support these charges.

17. In the past many decisions depended more on hunch and lobbying than hard evidence about the educational consequences of funding allocations.

18. A ‘Clinically proven’ statement in advertising is an effective sales pitch, usually a vague claim that requires no hard evidence and is not easy to disprove.

19. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary EnglishAnecdataan‧ec‧da‧ta/ˈænəkdeɪtə, -dɑːtə/noun[uncountable]  information which is presentedas if it is the result of seriousresearch, but which is actually basedon what someone thinks but cannot prove All this is just Anecdata, when what we need now is some hard evidence of what UK firms are doing.