Avowal vs. Testimony

Check any text for mistakes in above text box. Use the Grammar Checker to check your text.

Grammarly Online - Best Grammar and Plagiarism Checker for Students, Teachers

Avowalnoun

An open declaration of affirmation or admission of knowledge.

Avowalnoun

An open declaration; frank acknowledgment; as, an avowal of such principles.

Avowalnoun

a statement asserting the existence or the truth of something

Testimonynoun

(legal) statements made by a witness in court.

Testimonynoun

An account of first-hand experience.

Testimonynoun

(religion) In a church service, a personal account, such as of one's conversion.

Testimonynoun

Witness; evidence; proof of some fact.

Testimonynoun

A solemn declaration or affirmation made for the purpose of establishing or proving some fact.

Testimonynoun

Affirmation; declaration; as, these doctrines are supported by the uniform testimony of the fathers; the belief of past facts must depend on the evidence of human testimony, or the testimony of historians.

Testimonynoun

Open attestation; profession.

Testimonynoun

Witness; evidence; proof of some fact.

Testimonynoun

The two tables of the law.

Testimonynoun

Hence, the whole divine revelation; the sacre Scriptures.

Testimonyverb

To witness; to attest; to prove by testimony.

Testimonynoun

a solemn statement made under oath

Testimonynoun

an assertion offering firsthand authentication of a fact;

Testimonynoun

something that serves as evidence;

Testimonynoun

a formal written or spoken statement, especially one given in a court of law

Testimonynoun

evidence or proof of something

Testimonynoun

a public recounting of a religious conversion or experience.

Testimonynoun

a solemn protest or declaration.

Testimony

In law and in religion, testimony is a solemn attestation as to the truth of a matter.

More relevant Comparisons