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Topic: Law

corroborate

IPA: /kəˈrɒbəreɪt/

KK: /kəˈrɑːbəˌreɪt/

verb

Definition: To provide evidence or information that supports or confirms something, making it more certain or reliable.

Example: The witness was called to corroborate the defendant's alibi.

corroborated

IPA: /kəˈrɒbəreɪtɪd/

KK: /kəˈrɑːbəˌreɪtɪd/

adjective

Definition: Made more certain or confirmed, often by providing additional evidence or support.

Example: The witness's testimony corroborated the defendant's alibi, making it more believable.

verb

Definition: To confirm or support something with evidence or proof.

Example: The witness corroborated the suspect's alibi during the trial.

corroborating

IPA: /kəˈrɒbəreɪtɪŋ/

KK: /kəˈrɑːbəˌreɪtɪŋ/

adjective

Definition: Providing support or evidence for something, often to confirm its truth or validity.

Example: The corroborating evidence helped to strengthen the case against the suspect.

verb

Definition: To confirm or support something with evidence or facts.

Example: The witness is corroborating the suspect's alibi with her testimony.

corroboration

IPA: /kəˌrɒbəˈreɪʃən/

KK: /kəˌrɑːbəˈreɪʃən/

noun

Definition: The act of confirming or supporting something with additional evidence or information.

Example: The witness provided corroboration for the defendant's alibi during the trial.

corroborative

IPA: /kəˈrɒbəreɪtɪv/

KK: /kəˈrɑːbəˌreɪtɪv/

adjective

Definition: Relating to or serving as evidence that supports or confirms something.

Example: The witness provided corroborative testimony that helped the jury reach a verdict.

noun

Definition: A substance or item that supports or confirms something, often used in a medical context.

Example: The doctor prescribed a corroborative to help with the patient's recovery.

corroboratory

IPA: /kəˈrɒbəreɪtəri/

KK: /kəˈrɑːbərətɔːri/

adjective

Definition: Serving to support or confirm something, making it stronger or more certain.

Example: The corroboratory evidence helped the lawyer win the case.

corrupt

IPA: /kəˈrʌpt/

KK: /kəˈrʌpt/

intransitive verb

Definition: To change from good to bad in morals, integrity, or virtue; to become dishonest or unethical.

Example: The once honest politician began to corrupt after gaining power.

corrupted

IPA: /kəˈrʌptɪd/

KK: /kəˈrʌptɪd/

adjective

Definition: Having been changed from a good or pure state to one that is bad or dishonest.

Example: The corrupted data made it impossible to retrieve the original information.

verb

Definition: To have caused something to become morally or ethically unsound, or to have damaged or altered something in a negative way.

Example: The data was corrupted during the transfer, making it unusable.

corrupter

IPA: /kəˈrʌptər/

KK: /kəˈrʌptər/

noun

Definition: A person or thing that causes someone or something to become morally bad or dishonest.

Example: The corrupter used deceitful tactics to manipulate the situation.

corruptest

IPA: /kəˈrʌptɪst/

KK: /kəˈrʌptɪst/

adjective

Definition: Describing someone or something that is the most dishonest or morally wrong, often involving bribery or unethical behavior.

Example: In the investigation, they uncovered the corruptest officials who had taken bribes.

verb

Definition: To make someone or something dishonest or morally bad; to damage or spoil.

Example: If you corruptest the data, the results will be unreliable.

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