This source material is corroborated by official and semi-official records, and can be easily verified and cross-checked. |
|
The truth was reluctantly confirmed by the Pentagon after news reports corroborated the evidence. |
|
It is also corroborated by most of the other contemporaneous documentary evidence. |
|
Urodynamic studies corroborated patient-reported reduction in rates of stress incontinence after surgery. |
|
This self report was corroborated by cotinine concentration in residual routine blood or saliva samples. |
|
The doubted statement is corroborated to a greater or lesser extent by the other statements or circumstances with which it fits in. |
|
Comparison of their photoreceptive cells with those of the chordates corroborated such a phylogenetic position. |
|
This claim sounds outrageous, and I have seen it corroborated in no other sources. |
|
Is it possible that Raines just can't see reliable sources for such tales, corroborated by other, unconnected reliable sources? |
|
Reporters went to Vietnam to interview survivors of the event who clearly corroborated official accounts. |
|
In silico screening of the available genome sequences corroborated results. |
|
The improved corporate outlook was corroborated by corporate earnings reports that, for most of 2003, exceeded expectations. |
|
This version of events is corroborated by Eliza's friend Milena Baroni, a 25-year-old law student from Rio. |
|
But like Knox, Sabrina changed her story several times and her alibi has yet to be corroborated. |
|
It corroborated a lot of things I had learned about the basic structure of the mission and how it unfolded. |
|
Over the past few years, pollsters repeatedly have corroborated the phenomenon. |
|
These findings were further corroborated with the results from the case studies and key informant interviews. |
|
We tended to believe those accounts that were reasonably well corroborated by these sources of information. |
|
Certain criticisms which related to the duration of the interviews could not be corroborated. |
|
The spectra of a sample of one hundred asteroids have been analyzed and the results were corroborated with their orbital dynamics. |
|
|
Some corroborated information that was favourable to the complainant was not included in the denial brief. |
|
This is corroborated by the relatively high participation rates for these three categories. |
|
To what extent was the testimony the grand jury heard corroborated or contradicted by forensic evidence? |
|
Their accounts were corroborated with residents and local government officials. |
|
This is corroborated by the fact that the interconversion between A 1 and A 3 is very fast at room temperature, which cannot be explained by a simple tautomeric conversion. |
|
In silico results corroborated published laboratory findings. |
|
These data were corroborated by publications of an independent consultancy firm specialised in the fibres sector. |
|
Those accounts of the sadistic methods of killing are corroborated by United States submissions to the Secretary-General. |
|
The answers to these questions must be corroborated by two references who have personally known the individual for at least three years. |
|
The existence of such risk must be corroborated by prima facie evidence. |
|
This statement will, I believe. be corroborated by any unprejudiced Homer man that has had an actual experience with Hen pigeons. |
|
These findings are corroborated by an examination of a random sample of 25 employees who can be considered to be representative of the Agency's staff. |
|
The work-related injury or disease is certified by the general practitioner, is usually accepted as such by the employer and is corroborated by witnesses. |
|
Online denouncement register allowing a pre-accusation that must be subsequently corroborated in the corresponding Public Ministry agency on a date given by the system. |
|
Also, despite his failing health, the late A. D. P. Heeney was magnanimous in according us two lengthy interviews during which he corroborated much of our interpretation of his chairmanship. |
|
The pinching of the nipple could signify that Gabrielle is pregnant, a supposition corroborated by the maidservant in the background sewing a layette-but is it really a layette? |
|
Evidence of his badness is being exhumed daily from the ground of the country he once ruled, and corroborated in his torture chambers and the loot he hoarded while ordinary Iraqis went hungry. |
|
This limits the capacity to combine corroborated evidence for species hypotheses from DNA barcoding with corroboration derived from evidence from other data sources. |
|
Youssef also disclosed a financial blueprint submitted by Finance ministress Raya Hassan which corroborated with Auditing Board findings. |
|
Between January and February, the Mission corroborated the cases of six children, who, after deserting from JEM, returned to the Iridimi refugee camp. |
|
|
As any limb well and duly exercised, grows stronger, the nerves of the body are corroborated thereby. |
|
This is corroborated by the decorations found at the beginning of each sura in this Qur'an, which are mostly geometric and have a more naïve look about them than later Qur'ans. |
|
Though theories cannot in Popper's view be supported, they can be corroborated: a better corroborated theory is one that has been subjected to more and more rigorous tests without having been falsified. |
|
Sturgeon denied ever saying this after the story was published near the start of the election campaign and her account was corroborated by the French embassy. |
|
He corroborated my account and added how surprised and shocked he had been at Russell's proposal. Needless to say, Russell advocated a pre-emptive nuclear strike on strictly humanitarian grounds. |
|
None of these allegations were corroborated by child welfare or police. |
|
Other witnesses have corroborated Beverly's testimony that undercover and uniformed police were in the vicinity at the time of the shooting, which Beverly assumed meant that they were in on the plan to kill Faulkner. |
|
This information was corroborated through tests done on site. |
|
In court, this analysis was assessed in conjunction with other elements, and was taken into account because it corroborated the rest of the evidence. |
|
His attribution for this statement similarly cannot be corroborated by reliable sources. |
|
Senator Carl Levin, which was later corroborated by an April 2006 report from the Defense Department's inspector general. |
|
One reason for this is the rule that in such cases the evidence for the prosecution must be corroborated in order to permit a conviction. |
|
Anecdotal reports of them flying much higher have yet to be corroborated with any direct evidence. |
|
This assessment is largely corroborated by archaeological finds of Hun military equipment, such as the Volnikovka and Brut Burials. |
|
Nick Thieberger, modern linguistic and archaeological research has not corroborated his arguments. |
|
In contrast, our molecular data show that Petrocosmea consists of five clades corroborated by morphological data as prementioned. |
|
A U.S. fish and Wildlife officer corroborated another account. |
|
In modern times, Bell's experiment has corroborated this interconnectedness, which demonstrated quantum entanglement of photons. |
|
However, the key allegation by Sir Henry Vane that Strafford had threatened to use the Irish army to subdue England was not corroborated and on 10 April Pym's case collapsed. |
|
They have also corroborated statements by four previous witnesses that Warner told the CFU delegates on May 11 that the money had been provided by Bin Hammam. |
|
|
Confessions obtained under torture could not be used as a ground for awarding punishment unless they were corroborated by circumstantial evidence. |
|
However, much of his account has not yet been corroborated by archaeology, whilst his narrative must in wide parts be considered as biased and, in some points, unlikely. |
|
Percutaneous coronary angiography revealed no evidence of obstructive coronary artery disease, and left ventriculography corroborated our echocardiogram findings. |
|
As such, Geographica provides a valuable source of information on the ancient world, especially when this information is corroborated by other sources. |
|
Langham claimed he downloaded this material as research for a character in the second series of Help, but Whitehouse's testimony only partially corroborated this explanation. |
|
When events described, such as Julius Caesar's invasions of Britain, can be corroborated from contemporary histories, Geoffrey's account can be seen to be wildly inaccurate. |
|
This assumption is corroborated by the fact that the proportion of semislugs in the present fauna is low as compared with the proportions of snails and slugs. |
|
However, whereas the attempts are not corroborated with convincible and sound facts and evidence, the Parties decline the proposal on a recurring basis. |
|