0 containing information, especially about a crime, that makes you think something is true but does not completely prove it:
1 relating to the circumstances in which something happened, but not to the thing itself:
Circumstantial evidence, which he employs in his chronological chapters, but not in this context, points in other directions.
They distinguish between elective bilinguals, a characteristic of individuals, and circumstantial bilinguals, a characteristic of groups.
For building this image, palpable fantasy may be more valuable than circumstantial evidence.
The location of these nematodes perhaps provides circumstantial evidence for the occurrence of vertical transmission.
There is circumstantial evidence that fibrils may have a protective function.
We consider the different notions of the etranger as socially constructed and circumstantial.
Part of that evidence is circumstantial and overtly statistical, to be sure, but it is certainly not a void.
Their being rich, then, is at least partly due to their circumstantial luck.