English to Arabic Dictionary credence

credence

تصديق
definition
noun
psychoanalysis finds little credence among laymen
belief in or acceptance of something as true.
a credence table
a small side table, shelf, or niche in a church for holding the elements of the Eucharist before they are consecrated.
translation of 'credence'
noun
إيمان,
تصديق,
اعتماد
example
It almost lends 'credence' to the prosecution's case.
That's a problem, because the credentials of professionals lend 'credence' to their beliefs, however outrageous.
Towards the end of the tape the sound of breaking glass and crockery lends 'credence' to the theory that passengers rushed the aisle with the food trolley.
The doctrine of reincarnation is one of the world's most popular religious beliefs, and one which has also found 'credence' with many in the West, along with the what goes around comes around belief in Karma.
When the government is giving you millions of dollars to show a drug is harmful, you're going to give more 'credence' to experiments that show it is, no matter how flawed, because your career depends on it.
I took the finger towel and glass cruets of water and wine to the 'credence' table at the right of the altar and put out the bell on the step where I would be kneeling at the consecration.
The name of the place also lends 'credence' to his theory.
In fact, scholarly research lends 'credence' to the observational accounts of the mainstream news media and the conventional wisdom of partisan practitioners.
The record of systemic abuse of the program lends 'credence' to claims that the oil-ministry list is genuine and should be investigated.
The picture is also jumpy and unfocused at times, which also lends 'credence' to the high-resolution argument.
The fact that tutorial utilization resulted in even higher examination scores lends 'credence' to their usefulness as a learning tool.
A decision from the ethics committee lends 'credence' , just by its existence, to the moral correctness of that decision.
The demonstrated fact that material does travel from one planet to another lends 'credence' to the hypothesis.
This lends 'credence' to the mother's position that the policy was there for the financial security of the mother and children rather than anything else.
Meanwhile, they're also accepting that the slump in singles sales isn't down to illegal downloading alone; they give some 'credence' to the ‘rival entertainment’ argument.
The fact that the association between identity and support was actually stronger for boys than for girls lends 'credence' to this hypothesis.
It also lends 'credence' to the notion that the availability of gambling opportunities is correlated positively with the incidence of problem and pathological gambling behaviors.
The research lends 'credence' to the notion that common bacterial infections might play a role in determining who is stricken with the debilitating neurological disorder.
This concept held some 'credence' , especially among paleontologists, until the modern evolutionary synthesis was established in the 1940s.
being called upon by the media as an expert lends 'credence' to one's opinions
This observation lends 'credence' to the view that the Ohio Prairie Peninsula prairies developed through migration from the west.
Nevertheless, the idea has survived, gaining 'credence' even in official circles, and continues to be invoked in any discussion, official or otherwise, of the future of the Egyptian theatre.
being called upon by the media as an expert lends 'credence' to one's opinions
But their demands helped to muddy the waters and were given wide 'credence' among their supporters in the United States.
psychoanalysis finds little 'credence' among laymen
The existence of palm leaf libraries lends 'credence' to the proletariat nature of ancient Oriya literature.
Their battered condition lends 'credence' to the story, for why else would they have been saved, if not for their association with the martyred slave?
Because Bahamian society is small, insular and closed, it is possible for certain ideas to circulate, gain 'credence' and become accepted as fact.
a 'credence' table
But seriously, there is 'credence' in the belief that we fear what we do not know.
Credits: Google Translate
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