0 past simple and past participle of adduce --
1 to give reasons why you think something is true: --
None of the evidence adduced in court was conclusive.
Lexical training studies can be adduced in support of this interpretation.
And what method would be pursued, and what evidence adduced, to establish such orderings of alignments and their connection with choices of address form?
Indeed, the case of medieval archaeology is very different from that of prehistoric archaeology where no historical evidence can be adduced to support academic theories.
That the particular phenomenon will be adduced as a mark of the privileged value (musical coherence, musico-dramatic correspondence) goes without saying.
Another, albeit less obvious, indication for such an overlap may be adduced from the fairly low frequency of trips in the cargo-carrying sector.
As grounds for their skepticism, they adduced the same contentions that became common among physicists and were outlined in the previous section.
Then he adduced as an excuse that he was convinced that the thesis had been already widely spread.
No fresh argument would be adduced for making it 'a special case'.