View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Doubt.
Doubt
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Doubt meaning
To be undecided about; to lack confidence in; to disbelieve, to question. | To harbour suspicion about; suspect. | To anticipate with dread or fear; to apprehend.
Example sentences (20)
Have absolutely no doubt that had I been sentencing you closer to the time it happened you would be going to prison, no doubt about that at all.
Asked if the last two games had cast doubt on United’s ability to start moving in the right direction again with results, Simpson said: “I don't think these games cast a doubt on it.
In times when people doubt you or you even doubt yourself, let your work speak for itself.
No doubt city council leaders are watching developments carefully, as their plans for thousands of new homes in the area served by the branch line would be thrown into doubt, if the station improvements are not completed.
Our strength alone is not enough to combat these troubles because our human abilities are beclouded by fear and doubt, and the Evil One does well in an environment of fear and doubt.
There is no doubt that a happy caretaker will nurse a happy child, nor is there any doubt that a caretaker who is well treated by their “boss” would return the favor.
COLBERT: I think there's no doubt that I do what I do because I wanted to make her happy - no doubt.
Heck, if you are going to doubt something, doubt your limits.
Ainsley Maitland-Niles is also an injury doubt, with Arsene Wenger expressing doubt over the youngster’s availability last week.
But, “If I don’t stay in my practice with creating, I’ll doubt myself and I’ll doubt my identity as an immersive theatermaker.
Descartes's margin note for the above paragraph is: error (English:) That we cannot doubt of our existence while we doubt, and that this is the first knowledge we acquire when we philosophize in order.
Doubt about the faith of the baptizer is thus no ground for doubt about the validity of the baptism. citation Some conditions expressly do not affect validity—for example, whether submersion, immersion, affusion or aspersion is used.
For one thing, their possession is indubitably a sheet-anchor, at the mercy of the hurricane of Doubt— doubt as to whether the whole business is not Tommy-rot!
Hume's lasting legacy, however, was the doubt that his skeptical arguments cast on the legitimacy of inductive reasoning, allowing many skeptics who followed to cast similar doubt.
So, for example, for one to truly have faith in God, one would also have to doubt one's beliefs about God; the doubt is the rational part of a person's thought involved in weighing evidence, without which the faith would have no real substance.
When a claim is in doubt, justification can be used to support the claim and reduce or remove the doubt.
Absolutely no doubt about it.
According to Weatherzone, there's an 80 per cent chance of rain that could bring anywhere between 10-20 millimetres, which will no doubt make the conditions humid and sticky.
A confident Robins, meanwhile, said: “It’s a new era, there’s no doubt about that, and it feels like that.
Actually, you can’t, because at this time, I doubt if there’s one for the home.