Use "disprove" in a sentence

1. 6 synonyms for Confute: belie, discredit, disprove, rebut, refute, disprove

2. Current events disprove the Civilising Process

3. The allegations have been completely disprove.

4. Science is here to disprove such fraud.

5. Athetize To reject; to deny, to disprove

6. Their statement incorrect we disprove as follow.

7. Agnosticism holds that you can neither prove nor disprove God's existence.

8. He disprove the major contention of his opponents.

9. The man's a genius. He could disprove gravity.

10. Various experiments have failed to disprove the theory.

11. I defy anyone to disprove the defendant's statements.

12. We know of no surveys that either prove or disprove this point.

13. What are opposite words of Corroborate? Contradict, disprove, refute

14. In fact, it tends to disprove the biological argument.

15. It is impossible to prove or disprove McIntosh's assertion.

16. It took over two months to disprove the allegation.

17. Statistics disprove the myth that women are worse drivers than men.

18. Only the government has information which can disprove these claims.

19. The Congressman pledged to disprove the allegations and serve out his term.

20. To prove to be false, invalid, or defective; disprove: to Confute an argument

21. To prove to be false, invalid, or defective; disprove: to Confute an argument

22. But everyone knows that it is almost impossible to disprove a negative.

23. Do not agree? Then please first disprove my above proof published in 1992!

24. To prove to be false, invalid, or defective; disprove: to Confute an argument

25. The statistics to prove or disprove his hypothesis will take years to collect.

26. Confute definition, to prove to be false, invalid, or defective; disprove: to Confute an argument

27. Antonyms for Corroborate include contradict, disprove, rebut, refute, invalidate, negate, deny, disagree, disallow and disapprove

28. He's spent a year hearing criticisms, now he has an entire career to disprove them.

29. The two parties disprove the theory of the other, but unite in persecute the dissenter.

30. We can use Anova to prove/disprove if all the medication treatments were equally effective or not.

31. With his very limited knowledge of algebra, the young student could not see how to disprove it.

32. If you got a yes to that, that would disprove your theory of successive even numbers.

33. The student must spot and might support an idea, question it or even disprove it or.

34. The existence of God is a question of faith, and therefore impossible to prove or disprove.

35. An axiom is not supportable by the inability of the non-Assumer to disprove the statement.

36. Atheists believe there is no God, while agnostics say it's impossible to prove or disprove God's existence

37. The two parties disprove the theory of the other,(Sentence dictionary) but unite in persecute the dissenter.

38. 13 Writing in an impenetrably mystical Hebrew, Kook tried to disprove the traditionalists' view of Zionism as heresy.

39. /r/Anarchy101 is only intended for educational discussion, not to "disprove" Anarchism - consider /r/DebateAnarchism if you are interested in debate.

40. Personal reincarnation, of course, is something which it is impossible to prove or disprove, although theories and beliefs abound.

41. Evidence can thereby be admitted to prove or disprove the existence of the element which has been deemed jurisdictional.

42. Just because a thing appears to us at present to be illogical does not, of necessity, disprove its validity.

43. 28 If there was ever a product to disprove the axiom "If you build it, they will come, " it's the Segway.

44. 28 Just because a thing appears to us at present to be illogical does not, of necessity, disprove its validity.

45. To the man of letters it is a missile that he can fling in the reader's face to disprove the pestilent heresy.

46. We do not attempt, in the strict sense, to prove or to disprove anything, unless its importance makes it worthy of that honour.

47. In order to confirm or disprove the phenomena, certain criteria have to be decided in order for the theory to have any value.

48. $\begingroup$ Simplify the problem to disprove Convexity (it is a trick and proving complexity may require something like a Hessian for derivable functions)

49. So, while it is not possible to prove (or disprove) God's existence, what is provable is what happens when people stop believing in God.

50. We do not attempt, in the strict sense, to prove or to disprove anything[Sentencedict.com], unless its importance makes it worthy of that honour.

51. 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.

52. confute (third-person singular simple present confutes, present participle confuting, simple past and past participle Confuted) (transitive, now rare) To show (something or someone) to be false or wrong; to disprove or refute

53. Granted, the ouija board typewriter didn't prove or disprove the involvement of spirits,[Sentence dictionary] but it did prevent swindlers from consciously moving the triangle while pretending they were possessed.

54. Then came a period of reflection and inner-struggle as Herbert set out to write Peary's biography and reluctantly disprove his hero's claim to be the first man to the North Pole.

55. Confute (third-person singular simple present Confutes, present participle confuting, simple past and past participle Confuted) (transitive, now rare) To show (something or someone) to be false or wrong; to disprove or refute

56. Biogenesist - did not believe in the spontaneous generation theory first to disprove spontaneous generation theory when decaying meat was kept isolated from flies, maggots never developed whereas meat that was exposed to flies, was soon infested

57. Against such as these, all the arguments by which We disprove the principle of separation of Church and State are conclusive; with this super-added, that it is absurd the citizen should respect the Church, while the State may hold her in contempt.

58. A view related to apatheism, Apathetic agnosticism claims that no amount of debate can prove or disprove the existence of one or more deities, and if one or more deities exist, they do not appear to be concerned about the fate of humans; therefore, their existence has little to no impact on personal human affairs.

59. Controvert: 1 v prove to be false or incorrect Synonyms: rebut , refute Type of: confute , disprove prove to be false v be resistant to Synonyms: contradict , oppose Types: show 7 types hide 7 types blackball , negative , veto vote against; refuse to endorse; refuse to assent dissent , protest , resist express opposition through action

60. Confute: 1 v prove to be false Synonyms: disprove Antonyms: demonstrate , establish , prove , shew , show establish the validity of something, as by an example, explanation or experiment Types: explode show (a theory or claim) to be baseless, or refute and make obsolete controvert , rebut , refute prove to be false or incorrect falsify prove

61. Confute (v.) "prove to be false or invalid, overthrow by evidence or stronger argument," 1520s, from French Confuter, from Latin confutare "repress, check; disprove, restrain, silence," from assimilated form of com-, here probably an intensive prefix (see con-), + *futare "to beat," which is perhaps from PIE root *bhau- "to strike."

62. Apologies for the snark, but my thoughts are that if a company lies in their marketing materials, hides the actual process by which something works in Blather, utilizes a commodity product that anyone can buy, mixes up several therapy methods at once, and uses cure-all phrasings, it's not up to me to *disprove*

63. ‘The Biphobic attitudes of any other characters would have come off the way hers had earlier in the series: that character's attitude, not that of the show.’ ‘The mayor came under fire after laughing at a Biphobic joke on a local radio show.’ ‘These youth need to know that there are real adult bisexuals who disprove Biphobic

64. Confute (v.) "prove to be false or invalid, overthrow by evidence or stronger argument," 1520s, from French confuter, from Latin confutare "repress, check; disprove, restrain, silence," from assimilated form of com-, here probably an intensive prefix (see con-), + *futare "to beat," which is perhaps from PIE root *bhau-"to strike." Related: Confuted; confuting.

65. "act of disproving or proving to be false," mid-15c., from Latin Confutationem (nominative confutatio), noun of action from past-participle stem of confutare "repress, check; disprove, restrain, silence," from assimilated form of com-, here probably an intensive prefix (see con-), + *futare "to beat," which is perhaps from PIE root *bhau-"to strike."

66. Confutation (n.) "act of disproving or proving to be false," mid-15c., from Latin Confutationem (nominative confutatio), noun of action from past-participle stem of confutare "repress, check; disprove, restrain, silence," from assimilated form of com-, here probably an intensive prefix (see con-), + *futare "to beat," which is perhaps from PIE root *bhau-"to strike."