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empirically
[ em-pir-ik-lee ]
adverb
- in a way that is based on or guided by experience or experiment:
We hope that this study will form the basis for future empirically grounded research and policy analysis.
- in a way that is provable or verifiable by experience or experiment:
Can it be stated empirically that the Latino vote was the single biggest factor contributing to the candidate's victory?
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- ²¹²Ô·³Ù¾±Â·±ð³¾Â·±è¾±°ù·¾±Â·³¦²¹±ô·±ô²â adverb
- ²Ô´Ç²Ô·±ð³¾Â·±è¾±°ù·¾±Â·³¦²¹±ô·±ô²â adverb
- ´Ç·±¹±ð°ù·±ð³¾Â·±è¾±°ù·¾±Â·³¦²¹±ô·±ô²â adverb
- ²õ±ð³¾Â·¾±Â·±ð³¾Â·±è¾±°ù·¾±Â·³¦²¹±ô·±ô²â adverb
- ³Ü²Ô·±ð³¾Â·±è¾±°ù·¾±Â·³¦²¹±ô·±ô²â adverb
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of empirically1
Example Sentences
Even Aristotle, who could be said to have launched literary criticism, set forth the precepts of tragedy by empirically studying the indelible examples of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Euripides.
“It is not historically or empirically grounded, as the environmental components of fascism were quite limited.â€
His remit was to “clean up the corruption,†“end the conflicts of interest,†and “return those agencies to their rich tradition of gold standard, empirically based, evidence-based science, evidence-based medicine,†Kennedy said.
But logically and empirically, the differences between the claims are nugatory.
I think it really is a testament to the idea that constitutional interpretation does shift over time, In addition to being normatively undesirable, originalism is also just empirically untrue.
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